Abstract

The spectrum of charmonium resonances contains a number of unanticipated states along with several conventional quark-model excitations. The hadrons of different quantum numbers $J^P$ appear in a fairly narrow energy band, where $J^P$ refers to the spin-parity of a hadron at rest. This poses a challenge for Lattice QCD studies of (coupled-channel) meson-meson scattering aimed at the determination of scattering amplitudes and resonance pole positions. A wealth of information for this purpose can be obtained from the lattice spectra in frames with nonzero total momentum. These are particularly dense since hadrons with different $J^P$ contribute to any given lattice irreducible representation. This is because $J^P$ is not a good quantum number in flight, and also because the continuum symmetry is reduced on the lattice. In this paper we address the assignment of the underlying continuum $J^P$ quantum numbers to charmonia in flight using a $N_f = 2 + 1$ CLS ensemble. As a first step, we apply the single-hadron approach, where only interpolating fields of quark-antiquark type are used. The approach follows techniques previously applied to the light meson spectrum by the Hadron Spectrum Collaboration. The resulting spectra of charmonia with assigned $J^P$ will provide valuable information for the parameterization of (resonant) amplitudes in future determinations of resonance properties with lattice QCD.

Highlights

  • Over the past two decades many interesting resonancelike structures have been discovered in hadronic final states in the energy regime of heavy quarkonium

  • The JP of a hadron in flight is determined by making a Lorentz transformation of its decay products to its rest frame

  • In lattice QCD, there is no direct analogue of this procedure due to the reduced Lorentz symmetry

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past two decades many interesting resonancelike structures have been discovered in hadronic final states in the energy regime of heavy quarkonium (cc or bb). A large collection of these structures (generally referred to as XYZs) appears close to open-flavor strong decay thresholds and does not fit into a simple nonrelativistic quark-antiquark picture. Resonance peaks are associated with pole singularities of scattering amplitudes in the complex energy plane. Their nature and properties have to be inferred from the respective scattering matrices and from their decays. Potential models and effective field theories, that approximate certain regimes of the strong interaction, provide insight into describing these resonance peaks in various different ways including

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