30 research outputs found

    Solving integral equations in η→3π\eta\to 3\pi

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    A dispersive analysis of η→3π\eta\to 3\pi decays has been performed in the past by many authors. The numerical analysis of the pertinent integral equations is hampered by two technical difficulties: i) The angular averages of the amplitudes need to be performed along a complicated path in the complex plane. ii) The averaged amplitudes develop singularities along the path of integration in the dispersive representation of the full amplitudes. It is a delicate affair to handle these singularities properly, and independent checks of the obtained solutions are demanding and time consuming. In the present article, we propose a solution method that avoids these difficulties. It is based on a simple deformation of the path of integration in the dispersive representation (not in the angular average). Numerical solutions are then obtained rather straightforwardly. We expect that the method also works for ω→3π\omega\to 3\pi.Comment: 11 pages, 10 Figures. Version accepted for publication in EPJC. The ancillary files contain an updated set of fundamental solutions. The numerical differences to the former set are tiny, see the READMEv2 file for detail

    Quark-mass dependence in ω→3π\omega\to3\pi decays

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    We study the quark-mass dependence of ω→3π\omega\to3\pi decays, based on a dispersion-theoretical framework. We rely on the quark-mass-dependent scattering phase shift for the pion-pion PP-wave extracted from unitarized chiral perturbation theory. The dispersive representation then takes into account the final-state rescattering among all three pions. The described formalism may be used as an extrapolation tool for lattice QCD calculations of three-pion decays, for which ω→3π\omega\to3\pi can serve as a paradigm case.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures; v2: added two references, version published in EPJ

    Introduction to the physics of the total cross section at LHC

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