2,532 research outputs found
Hadron loops effect on mass shifts of the charmed and charmed-strange spectra
The hadron loop effect is conjectured to be important in understanding
discrepancies between the observed states in experiments and the theoretical
expectations of non-relativistic potential model. We present that, in an easily
operable procedure, the hadron loop effect could shift the poles downwards to
reduce the differences and provide better descriptions of both the masses and
the total widths, at least, of the radial quantum number charmed and
charmed-strange states. The mixing phenomena could be naturally
explained due to their couplings with common channels. The newly observed
states are also addressed, but there are still some problems remaining unclear.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Comprehending heavy charmonia and their decays by hadron loop effects
We present that including the hadron loop effects could help us to understand
the spectrum of the heavier charmonium-like states and their decays
simultaneously. The observed states could be represented by the poles on the
complex energy plane. By coupling to the opened thresholds, the pole positions
are shifted from the bare states predicted in the quenched potential model to
the complex energy plane. The pole masses are generally pulled down from the
bare masses and the open-charm decay widths are related to the imaginary parts
of the pole positions. Moreover, we also analyze the pole trajectory of the
state while the quark pair production rate from the vacuum
changes in its uncertainty region, which indicates that the enigmatic X(3872)
state may be regarded as a charmonium-dominated state
dressed by the hadron loops as the others.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, 2 table
- …