Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and Baryons

During the last three years strong experimental evidence from B and charm factories has been accumulating for the existence of exotic hadronic quarkonia, narrow resonances which cannot be made from a quark and an antiquark. Their masses and decay modes show that they contain a heavy quark-antiquark...

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Main Author: Karliner Marek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2014-04-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20147100065
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spelling doaj-8c5a5666327c478e80f5f8e5d5db5f8b2021-08-02T03:23:20ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2014-04-01710006510.1051/epjconf/20147100065epjconf_icnfp2013_00065Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and BaryonsKarliner Marek0Raymond and Beverly Sackler School of Physics and Astronomy Tel Aviv University During the last three years strong experimental evidence from B and charm factories has been accumulating for the existence of exotic hadronic quarkonia, narrow resonances which cannot be made from a quark and an antiquark. Their masses and decay modes show that they contain a heavy quark-antiquark pair, but their quantum numbers are such that they must also contain a light quark-antiquark pair. The theoretical challenge has been to determine the nature of these resonances. The main possibilities are that they are either "genuine tetraquarks", i.e. two quarks and two antiquarks within one confinement volume, or "hadronic molecules" of two heavy-light mesons. In the last few months there as been more and more evidence in favor of the latter. I discuss the experimental data and its interpretation and provide fairly precise predictions for masses and quantum numbers of the additional exotic states which are naturally expected in the molecular picture but have yet to be observed. In addition, I provide arguments in favor of the existence of an even more exotic state – a hypothetical deuteron-like bound state of two heavy baryons. I also consider “baryon-like" states QQ' q¯q¯′$\bar q\bar q\prime $, which if found will be direct evidence not just for near-threshold binding of two heavy mesons, but for genuine tetraquarks with novel color networks. I stress the importance of experimental search for doubly-heavy baryons in this context. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20147100065
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karliner Marek
spellingShingle Karliner Marek
Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and Baryons
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Karliner Marek
author_sort Karliner Marek
title Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and Baryons
title_short Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and Baryons
title_full Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and Baryons
title_fullStr Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and Baryons
title_full_unstemmed Doubly Heavy Tetraquarks and Baryons
title_sort doubly heavy tetraquarks and baryons
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2014-04-01
description During the last three years strong experimental evidence from B and charm factories has been accumulating for the existence of exotic hadronic quarkonia, narrow resonances which cannot be made from a quark and an antiquark. Their masses and decay modes show that they contain a heavy quark-antiquark pair, but their quantum numbers are such that they must also contain a light quark-antiquark pair. The theoretical challenge has been to determine the nature of these resonances. The main possibilities are that they are either "genuine tetraquarks", i.e. two quarks and two antiquarks within one confinement volume, or "hadronic molecules" of two heavy-light mesons. In the last few months there as been more and more evidence in favor of the latter. I discuss the experimental data and its interpretation and provide fairly precise predictions for masses and quantum numbers of the additional exotic states which are naturally expected in the molecular picture but have yet to be observed. In addition, I provide arguments in favor of the existence of an even more exotic state – a hypothetical deuteron-like bound state of two heavy baryons. I also consider “baryon-like" states QQ' q¯q¯′$\bar q\bar q\prime $, which if found will be direct evidence not just for near-threshold binding of two heavy mesons, but for genuine tetraquarks with novel color networks. I stress the importance of experimental search for doubly-heavy baryons in this context.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20147100065
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