6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1269022

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Substructure of Multiquark Hadrons (Snowmass 2021 White Paper)

Nora BrambillaHua-xing ChenAngelo EspositoJacopo FerrettiAnthony FrancisFeng-kun GuoChristoph HanhartAtsushi HosakaRobert L. JaffeMarek KarlinerRichard LebedRandy LewisLuciano MaianiNilmani MathurUlf-g MeißnerAlessandro PilloniAntonio Davide PolosaSasa PrelovsekJean-marc RichardVeronica RiquerMitja RosinaJonathan L. RosnerElena SantopintoEric S. SwansonAdam P. SzczepaniakSachiko TakeuchiMakoto TakizawaFrank WilczekYasuhiro YamaguchiBing-song Zou

subject

High Energy Physics - PhenomenologyHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)High Energy Physics::LatticeNuclear TheoryHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyFOS: Physical sciencesHigh Energy Physics::Experimenthep-phParticle Physics - Phenomenology

description

In recent years there has been a rapidly growing body of experimental evidence for existence of exotic, multiquark hadrons, i.e. mesons which contain additional quarks, beyond the usual quark-antiquark pair and baryons which consist of more than three quarks. In all cases with robust evidence they contain at least one heavy quark Q=c or b, the majority including two heavy quarks. Two key theoretical questions have been triggered by these discoveries: (a) how are quarks organized inside these multiquark states -- as compact objects with all quarks within one confinement volume, interacting via color forces, perhaps with an important role played by diquarks, or as deuteron-like hadronic molecules, bound by light-meson exchange? (b) what other multiquark states should we expect? The two questions are tightly intertwined. Each of the interpretations provides a natural explanation of parts of the data, but neither explains all of the data. It is quite possible that both kinds of structures appear in Nature. It may also be the case that certain states are superpositions of the compact and molecular configurations. This Whitepaper brings together contributions from many leading practitioners in the field, representing a wide spectrum of theoretical interpretations. We discuss the importance of future experimental and phenomenological work, which will lead to better understandingof multiquark phenomena in QCD.

http://inspirehep.net/record/2060761