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Future Hadronic Spectroscopy at JLAB and J-PARC

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Title: Future Hadronic Spectroscopy at JLAB and J-PARC


1
Future Hadronic Spectroscopyat JLAB and J-PARC
  • Introduction
  • ? and ? Resonances
  • Quark-Model Predictions
  • ? Resonances
  • Experimental Considerations
  • Summary

Hawaii 2005 Second Joint Meeting of the Nuclear
Physics Divisions of the APS and JPS September
18, 2005
2
Introduction
  • Historically, hadron spectroscopy experiments
    led to several important discoveries, including
  • Development of concept of SU(3) symmetry
  • Discovery of strange quark
  • Discovery of charm quark
  • Evidence for glueballs and multiquark states.
  • This talk will focus on hyperon spectroscopy, at
    the request of the organizers.

3
Introduction (continued)
  • In comparison with N and ? resonances, very
    little is known about hyperon states.
  • Due to relative paucity of K?p and K?n data, our
    knowledge of properties of ? and ? comes almost
    entirely from energy-dependent PWAs.
  • In comparison with strangeness 0 and -1, very
    little is known about ? and O states.

4
Open Questions
  • Where are the missing hyperon states?
  • Are there hybrid hadrons (i.e., states involving
    gluonics degrees of freedom)?
  • Are there exotic hadrons, and if so, what are
    their spectra?
  • Are there new symmetries to be discovered by
    improving our knowledge of hadron spectra?

5
Expected and Observed Baryon States
  • Assuming baryons to be formed of three quarks
    (u,d,s), then SU(3) provides the decomposition
    into multiplets to which these states will belong
    as 33310881. Thus, the states should be in
    the ratio
  • N????O213331.
  • There are 14 N listed in the PDG tables as 3
    and 4 resonances, so the expected number and
    observed number of 3 and 4 resonances is

Resonance ? ? ? ? O
Expected 7 21 21 21 7
Observed 10 14 10 6 2
From V.V. Abaev et al., Hadron Spectroscopy at
J-PARC LOI.
6
Status of ? and ? Resonances
7
Methods for Identifying ? and ? Events
  • Strangeness -1 hyperons may be identified by
    formation in KN experiments or by production in
    ?N experiments.
  • Examples of formation reactions are KN ? KN, ??,
    ??, ??, ??, K?, KN, ??(1520), and ??(1385),
    where the last two reactions are typically
    identified from the 3-body final states KN ? ???
    and KN ? ???.

8
Typical Data at 1165 and 1177 MeV/c
9
Typical Data for KN??? at 1245 and 1233 MeV/c
10
Crystal Ball Results for K?p??0? at 750 MeV/c
11
Partial-Wave Analyses of KN Scattering
  • Advantage of formation reactions to study ? and
    ? production is that such reactions lend
    themselves to partial-wave analyses.
  • Prior PWAs were limited not only by the available
    data, but also by computers slow by modern
    standards.
  • Essentially all resonance information is based on
    simplistic energy-dependent parametrizations that
    violate unitarity of the S-matrix.
  • There is a strong need for high-statistics data
    (including spin observables) for a variety of
    formation reactions with broad energy coverage.

12
Example of an Argand Diagram Showing the ?(1520)
and ?(1690) Resonances
13
Quark-Model Predictions
14
On Missing ? and ? States
  • Presence of heavier strange quark leads to
    segregation of states into ? oscillations, in
    which the two nonstrange quarks oscillate, and ?
    oscillations, in which the strange quark
    oscillates against the nonstrange pair.
  • The nonstrange ? oscillations trivially decouple
    from KN and related channels in the single-quark
    transition model.
  • Better data are needed in order to make
    comparisons with predictions.

15
? Resonances
  • Not much is known about ? resonances. This is
    because
  • They can only be produced as a part of a final
    state, and so the analysis is more complicated
    than if direct formation is possible,
  • The production cross sections are small
    (typically a few µb), and
  • The final states are topologically complicated
    and difficult to study with electronic
    techniques.
  • Note taken from Review of Particle Physics, PLB
    592, p. 967 (2004).

16
Status of ? Resonances
17
Methods for Identifying ? Resonances
  • ? events must be identified in production
    experiments by either
  • (1) constructing invariant-mass distributions
    from the ? decay products, or by
  • (2) making missing-mass distributions.
  • Examples will be presented of both methods.

18
Typical Criteria for Selecting ?? (or O? )
Events in K?p??? anything
  • Require invariant mass of ?? and p to be
    consistent with ? mass.
  • Require invariant mass of ?? (or K? ) and ? to be
    consistent with ?? (or O?).
  • Require reconstructed ? and ?? (or O? ) tracks to
    be at least 2 cm.

D. Aston et al., PRD 32, 2270 (1985).
19
Distributions of ??? Invariant Mass
D. Aston et al., PRD 32, 2270 (1985).
20
? Detection by Missing-Mass Distributions
  • Study of K? p ? K X, where X contains ?
  • Completely avoids problem of detecting decay
    products
  • Analogous to study of ? p ? K K X, which can be
    studied at JLab

C.M. Jenkins et al., PRL 51, 951(1983)
21
States Seen in K? p ? K ??
C.M. Jenkins et al., PRL 51, 951(1983)
22
Experimental ConsiderationsHyperon Spectroscopy
Physics at J-PARC
  • In Summer 2002, J-PARC Project Director called
    for LOIs for the nuclear and particle physics
    experiments at J-PARC. A total of 30 LOIs were
    received.
  • Of these, at least three relate directly to
    hadron spectroscopy (baryons and mesons), and two
    of those involve spectroscopy requiring
    high-momentum kaon beams.

23
LOIs for Hadron Spectroscopy with Kaon Beams
  • L13 Hadron spectroscopy at J-PARC
  • Contact persons Shin-ya Sawada (KEK, Japan) and
    Hal Spinka (ANL, USA).
  • L28 Letter of intent for a hadron spectroscopy
    experiment with RF-separated high energy K beam
    at JHF
  • Contact persons V. Obraztsov (IHEP, Russia) and
    T. Tsuru (KEK, Japan).

24
Kaon beams for Hyperon Spectroscopy at J-PARC
  • Proposed K1.8 beam (high-intensity K? beam at
    1.8 GeV/c available at the 50-GeV PS) opens the
    possibility for a rich program in ? and ?
    spectroscopy for states up to 2 GeV in mass.
  • To carry out a program in ? spectroscopy will
    require separated K? beams up to about 6 GeV/c.
  • As already noted, present data are statistically
    limited, and polarization data are especially
    needed.

25
Hyperon Spectroscopy at JLAB
  • Program to explore ? spectroscopy has already
    begun at JLAB using missing-mass methods (J.
    Price et al.).
  • Great opportunity exists to open a new frontier
    in ? and ? spectroscopy by photoproduction and
    electroproduction.
  • Production by real or virtual photons offers
    possibility to discover states that decouple from
    KN and therefore, which are not likely to be
    seen, in formation experiments with kaon beams.

26
Summary
  • Hyperon spectroscopy is a fundamental area of
    physics about which we still know very little.
  • Presence of one or two heavy quarks represents
    a departure from the permutation symmetry
    characterizing N and ? spectroscopy.
    Quark-model predictions for mass spectrum and
    decay mechanisms have not been stringently tested
    due to almost no experimental progress in past
    two decades.
  • High-intensity beam lines with modern 4?
    detectors offer opportunity to open a new
    frontier on the study of S-1 and S-2 baryons.
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