4.8 Article

Explaining the Many Threshold Structures in the Heavy-Quark Hadron Spectrum

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 126, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.152001

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [11835015, 12047503, 11961141012]
  2. NSFC
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [TRR110]
  4. NSFC [12070131001]
  5. DFG [196253076]
  6. Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) [XDB34030000, QYZDB-SSW-SYS013]
  7. CAS Center for Excellence in Particle Physics (CCEPP)

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Significant progress has been made experimentally in the hadron spectrum containing heavy quarks in the last two decades, with many resonant structures observed around thresholds of heavy hadrons. By constructing a nonrelativistic effective field theory with open channels, the authors discuss the generalities of threshold behavior and explain the abundance of near-threshold peaks in the heavy quarkonium regime, emphasizing that the threshold cusp can show up as a peak only for channels with attractive interaction.
Tremendous progress has been made experimentally in the hadron spectrum containing heavy quarks in the last two decades. It is surprising that many resonant structures arc around thresholds of a pair of heavy hadrons. There should be a threshold cusp at any S-wave threshold. By constructing a nonrelativistic effective field theory with open channels, we discuss the generalities of threshold behavior, and offer an explanation of the abundance of near-threshold peaks in the heavy quarkonium regime. We show that the threshold cusp can show up as a peak only for channels with attractive interaction, and the width of the cusp is inversely proportional to the reduced mass relevant for the threshold. We argue that there should be threshold structures at any threshold of a pair of heavy-quark and heavy-antiquark hadrons, which have attractive interaction at threshold, in the invariant mass distribution of a heavy quarkonium and light hadrons that couple to that open-flavor hadron pair. The structure becomes more pronounced if there is a near-threshold pole. Predictions of the possible pairs are also given for the ground state heavy hadrons. Precisely measuring the threshold structures will play an important role in revealing the heavy-hadron interactions, and thus understanding the puzzling hidden-charm and hidden-bottom structures.

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