10 research outputs found
Exotic mesons with hidden charm and bottom near thresholds
We study heavy hadron spectroscopy near heavy meson thresholds. We employ
heavy pseudoscalar meson P and heavy vector meson P* as effective degrees of
freedom and consider meson exchange potentials between them. All possible
composite states which can be constructed from the P and P* mesons are studied
up to the total angular momentum J <= 2. We consider, as exotic states,
isosinglet states with exotic J^{PC} quantum numbers and isotriplet states. We
solve numerically the Schr\"odinger equation with channel-couplings for each
state. We found B(*)barB(*) molecule states for I^G(J^{PC}) = 1^+(1^{+-})
correspond to the masses of twin resonances Zb(10610) and Zb(10650). We predict
several possible B(*)barB(*) bound and/or resonant states in other channels. On
the other hand, there are no B(*)barB(*) bound and/or resonant states whose
quantum numbers are exotic.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of The 5th
International Workshop on Charm Physics (Charm 2012
Exotic baryons from a heavy meson and a nucleon - Positive parity states -
We study heavy baryons with exotic flavor quantum numbers formed by a heavy
meson and a nucleon (DbarN and BN) with positive parity. One pion exchange
interaction, providing a tensor force, dominates as a long range force to bind
the DbarN and BN ystems. In the heavy quark mass limit, pseudoscalar meson and
vector meson are degenerate and the binding mechanism by the tensor force
analogous to that in the nuclear systems becomes important. As a result, we
obtain the DbarN and BN resonant states in the J^P=1/2^+, 3/2^+ and 5/2^+
channels with I=0
Hadron resonances with coexistence of different natures
We discuss coexistence/mixing of different natures of hadronic composite
(molecule) and elementary (quark-intrinsic) ones in hadron resonances. The
discussions here are based on our previous publications on the origin of hadron
resonances \cite{Hyodo:2008xr}, exotic meson-nucleons as hadronic
composites containing one anti-heavy quark \cite{Yamaguchi:2011xb}, and the
study of as a typical example to show explicitly the mixing of the two
different natures \cite{Nagahiro:2011jn}. In all cases, interactions are
derived from the chiral dynamics of the light flavor sector. These interactions
generate in various cases hadronic composite/molecule states, serving varieties
of structure beyond the conventional quark model.Comment: Proceedings for Hadron Nuclear Physics (HNP) 2011, Pohang, Korea,
February 21-24 (2011