Abstract

The $K_{0}^{*}(700)$ meson appears as the lightest strange scalar meson in PDG. Although there were a lot of experimental and theoretical efforts to establish this particle and determine its properties and nature, it still needs confirmation in an experiment and its internal quark-gluon organization needs to be clarified. In this connection, we study some spectroscopic properties of this state in a hot medium as well as a vacuum by modeling it as a usual meson of a quark and an aniquark. In particular, we investigate its mass and coupling or decay constant in terms of the temperature of a hot medium by including the medium effects by the fermionic and gluonic parts of the energy momentum tensor as well as the temperature-dependent continuum threshold, quark, gluon and mixed condensates. We observe that the mass of $K_{0}^{*}(700)$ remains unchanged up to $T \simeq 0.6 ~ T_c$ with $ T_c $ being the critical temperature, but it starts to diminish after this point and approaches zero near to the critical temperature referring to the melting of the meson. The coupling of $K_{0}^{*}(700)$ is also sensitive to $ T $ at higher temperatures. It starts to grow rapidly after $T \simeq 0.85 ~ T_c$. We turn off the medium effects and calculate the mass and coupling of the $K_{0}^{*}(700)$ state at zero temperature. The obtained mass is in accord with the average Breit-Wigner mass value reported by PDG.

Highlights

  • The KÃ0ð700Þ meson appears as the lightest strange scalar meson in Particle Data Group (PDG)

  • We study some spectroscopic properties of this state in a hot medium as well as a vacuum by modeling it as a usual meson of a quark and an antiquark

  • We observe that the mass of KÃ0ð700Þ remains unchanged up to T ≃ 0.6Tc with Tc being the critical temperature, but it starts to diminish after this point and approaches zero near to the critical temperature referring to the melting of the meson

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Summary

MOTIVATION

The light scalar mesons with a mass below 1 GeV are among particles that are not experimentally well established, and their nature needs to be clarified. [25], the authors studied the thermal properties of the lowest multiplet of the QCD light-flavor scalar resonances, including KÃ0ð700Þ state at a finite temperature in the framework of the unitarized Uð3Þ chiral perturbation theory They found that the mass of this resonance decreases when increasing the temperature, considerably. We discuss the behavior of the mass and decay constant of this state with respect to the temperature by including the hot medium effects by the fermionic and gluonic parts of the energy-momentum tensor as well as the temperaturedependent continuum threshold and quark-gluon condensates. To this end, we use the thermal QCD sum rule formalism.

THERMAL SUM RULES FOR PHYSICAL QUANTITIES
NUMERICAL ANALYSES
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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