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Light-Meson Spectroscopy at COMPASS

Light-Meson Spectroscopy at COMPASS

来源:Arxiv_logoArxiv
英文摘要

The goal of the COMPASS experiment at CERN is to study the structure and spectroscopy of hadrons. The two-stage spectrometer has large acceptance and covers a wide kinematic range for charged as well as neutral particles allowing to access a wide range of reactions. Light mesons are studied with negative (mostly $\pi^-$) and positive ($p$, $\pi^+$) hadron beams with a momentum of $190\,\text{GeV}/c$. The light-meson spectrum is measured in different final states produced in diffractive dissociation reactions with squared four-momentum transfer $t$ to the target between $0.1$ and $1.0\,(\text{GeV}/c)^2$. The flagship channel is the $\pi^-\pi^+\pi^-$ final state, for which COMPASS has recorded the currently world's largest data sample. These data not only allow us to measure the properties of known resonances with high precision, but also to search for new states. Among these is a new axial-vector signal, the $a_1(1420)$, with unusual properties. The findings are confirmed by the analysis of the $\pi^-\pi^0\pi^0$ final state.

Fabian Krinner

for the COMPASS collaboration

10.1051/epjconf/201713705012

粒子探测技术、辐射探测技术、核仪器仪表物理学

Fabian Krinner.Light-Meson Spectroscopy at COMPASS[EB/OL].(2016-11-04)[2025-08-02].https://arxiv.org/abs/1611.01388.点此复制

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