6533b7d9fe1ef96bd126d5d4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Reanalysis of thee+e−→(D*D¯*)±π∓reaction and the claim for theZc(4025)resonance

Fernando Silveira NavarraMarina NielsenE. OsetE. OsetK. P. KhemchandaniA. Martínez Torres

subject

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsParticle physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsElectron–positron annihilationSpectrum (functional analysis)01 natural sciencesResonance (particle physics)Distribution (mathematics)0103 physical sciencesBound stateMass spectrumInvariant mass010306 general physicsEnergy (signal processing)

description

In this paper we study the reaction ${e}^{+}{e}^{\ensuremath{-}}\ensuremath{\rightarrow}{({D}^{*}{\overline{D}}^{*})}^{\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}}{\ensuremath{\pi}}^{\ensuremath{\mp}}$ in which the BESIII collaboration has claimed the existence of a ${1}^{+}$ resonance, named ${Z}_{c}(4025)$, in the ${D}^{*}{\overline{D}}^{*}$ invariant mass spectrum with a mass around 4026 MeV and width close to 26 MeV . We determine the ${D}^{*}{\overline{D}}^{*}$ invariant mass distribution and find that although the explanation considered by the BESIII collaboration is plausible, there are others which are equally possible, like a ${2}^{+}$ resonance or a bound state. Even more, we find that the data can be explained without the existence of a resonance/bound state. In view of the different possible interpretations found for the BESIII data, we try to devise a strategy which could help in identifying the origin of the signal reported by the BESIII collaboration. For this, we study the dependence of the ${D}^{*}{\overline{D}}^{*}$ spectrum considering the different options as a function of the total center-of-mass energy. We arrive at the conclusion that increasing the center-of-mass energy from 4.26 GeV to 4.6 GeV can be useful to distinguish between a resonance, a bound state or just a pure background as being responsible for the signal found. This information should be useful for future experiments.

https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.89.014025