Highlights from COMPASS in hadron spectroscopy
Fabian Krinner (for the COMPASS collaboration)

TL;DR
The paper reports on the COMPASS experiment's detailed analysis of light meson spectra, revealing a new state, the $a_1(1420)$, and evidence for an exotic $J^{PC}=1^{-+}$ wave, advancing understanding of hadron spectroscopy and QCD predictions.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed partial-wave analysis of light meson spectra from COMPASS, discovering a new meson state and evidence for exotic quantum numbers.
Findings
Discovery of the $a_1(1420)$ meson with specific mass and width.
Observation of a $J^{PC}=1^{-+}$ wave suggestive of an exotic state.
Enhanced precision in light meson spectroscopy from COMPASS data.
Abstract
Since Quantum Choromdynamics allows for gluon self-coupling, quarks and gluons cannot be observed as free particles, but only their bound states, the hadrons. This so-called confinement phenomenon is responsible for of the mass in the visible universe. The measurement of the hadron excitation spectra therefore gives valuable input for theory and phenomenology to quantitatively understand this phenomenon. One simple model to describe hadrons is the Constituent Quark Model (CQM), which knows two types of hadrons: mesons, consisting of a quark and an antiquark, and baryons, which are made out of three quarks. More advanced models, which are inspired by QCD as well as calculations within Lattice QCD predict the existence of other types of hadrons, which may be e.g. described solely by gluonic excitations (glueballs) or mixed quark and gluon excitations (hybrids). In order to search…
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