Central Diffractive Processes at the Tevatron, RHIC and LHC
L.A. Harland-Lang, V.A. Khoze, M.G. Ryskin, and W.J. Stirling

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theoretical study of central exclusive production of heavy quarkonia in high-energy hadron collisions at Tevatron, RHIC, and LHC, highlighting its potential for probing QCD and new physics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical analysis of CEP of heavy quarkonia across multiple colliders, emphasizing its significance for QCD and particle physics.
Findings
CEP processes can probe bound state physics and QCD methods
Results suggest CEP is a promising channel for new physics searches
Theoretical predictions align with existing experimental data
Abstract
Central exclusive production (CEP) processes in high-energy hadron collisions offer a very promising framework for studying both novel aspects of QCD and new physics signals. We report on the results of a theoretical study of the CEP of heavy quarkonia (chi and eta) at the Tevatron, RHIC and LHC. These processes provide important information on the physics of bound states and can probe the current ideas and methods of QCD, such as effective field theories and lattice QCD.
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