42 research outputs found
Dibaryons and where to find them
In recent years there has been tremendous progress in the investigation of
bound systems of quarks with multiplicities beyond the more usual two- and
three-quark systems. Experimental and theoretical progress has been made in the
four-, five- and even six-quark sectors. In this paper, we review the possible
lightest six-quark states using a simple ansatz based on SU(3) symmetry and
evaluate the most promising decay branches. The work will be useful to help
focus future experimental searches in this six-quark sector.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2012.1144
Measurement of the helicity asymmetry E for the γ→ p→ → pπ reaction in the resonance region: The CLAS Collaboration
The double-spin-polarization observable E for γ→ p→ → pπ has been measured with the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) at photon beam energies Eγ from 0.367 to 2.173GeV (corresponding to center-of-mass energies from 1.240 to 2.200GeV) for pion center-of-mass angles, cosθπ0c.m. , between - 0.86 and 0.82. These new CLAS measurements cover a broader energy range and have smaller uncertainties compared to previous CBELSA data and provide an important independent check on systematics. These measurements are compared to predictions as well as new global fits from The George Washington University, Mainz, and Bonn-Gatchina groups. Their inclusion in multipole analyses will allow us to refine our understanding of the single-pion production contribution to the Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn sum rule and improve the determination of resonance properties, which will be presented in a future publication
Beam spin asymmetry measurements of deeply virtual π0 production with CLAS12
The new experimental measurements of beam spin asymmetry were performed for the deeply virtual exclusive pi0 production in a wide kinematic region with the photon virtualities Q2 up to 6.6 GeV2 and the Bjorken scaling variable xB in the valence regime. The data were collected by the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS12) at Jefferson Lab with longitudinally polarized 10.6 GeV electrons scattered on an unpolarized liquid-hydrogen target. Sizable asymmetry values indicate a substantial contribution from transverse virtual photon amplitudes to the polarized structure functions. The interpretation of these measurements in terms of the Generalized Parton Distributions (GPDs) demonstrates their sensitivity to the chiral-odd GPD ET, which contains information on quark transverse spin densities in unpolarized and polarized nucleons and provides access to the nucleon's transverse anomalous magnetic moment. Additionally, the data were compared to a theoretical model based on a Regge formalism that was extended to the high photon virtualities