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May 28, 2024 to June 1, 2024
William & Mary School of Business
US/Eastern timezone
The timetable is out: 30 min slots are (20 + 10) min, 45 min slots are (35 + 10) min

The light meson regime from coupled-channel analyses

May 29, 2024, 11:15 AM
30m
Brinkley Commons Room (William & Mary School of Business)

Brinkley Commons Room

William & Mary School of Business

101 Ukrop Way, Williamsburg, VA 23185, USA
Spectroscopy of light mesons and baryons Session

Speaker

Meike Küßner (Ruhr-University Bochum)

Description

Nowadays, experimentally observed states that are often assigned to the light meson or charmonium sector might indicate an exotic nature. Such exotic particles include glueballs, hybrids, and tetraquarks. Not only do these states pose a theoretical challenge, but experimentally it is often difficult to distinguish exotic and non-exotic matter and to characterise their nature. In such cases, it helps to compare different production mechanisms and decay patterns. This provides additional constraints and allows for a coupled channel partial wave analysis to describe the different spectra simultaneously, respecting unitarity and analyticity. Therefore, gluon-poor two-photon fusion events and gluon-rich hadronic reactions as e.g. radiative J/ψ decays can be used to disentangle the highly populated light meson spectrum.
The BESIII experiment has collected world leading high statistic data samples in the charmonium region and further allows to study two-photon events. Therefore, BESIII offers great opportunities to combine different reactions and to shed light onto the light meson regime.
The talk will discuss recent experimental results from coupled channel analyses as well as recent PWA results from BESIII. Special emphasise will be on the models used and the associated software tools.

Primary author

Meike Küßner (Ruhr-University Bochum)

Presentation materials