The pion: an enigma within the Standard Model
Tanja Horn, Craig D. Roberts

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent experimental and theoretical progress in understanding the pion within the Standard Model, highlighting its role in revealing key features of QCD such as confinement and dynamical chiral symmetry breaking.
Contribution
It synthesizes new empirical data and theoretical insights on pion structure, emphasizing the connection between experimental results and fundamental QCD mechanisms.
Findings
Improved precision in charged-pion form factor data.
New results on the neutral-pion transition form factor.
Predictions for large-Q^2 behavior of the pion form factor to be tested at JLab 12.
Abstract
Almost 50 years after the discovery of gluons & quarks, we are only just beginning to understand how QCD builds the basic bricks for nuclei: neutrons, protons, and the pions that bind them. QCD is characterised by two emergent phenomena: confinement & dynamical chiral symmetry breaking (DCSB). They are expressed with great force in the character of the pion. In turn, pion properties suggest that confinement & DCSB are closely connected. As both a Nambu-Goldstone boson and a quark-antiquark bound-state, the pion is unique in Nature. Developing an understanding of its properties is thus critical to revealing basic features of the Standard Model. We describe experimental progress in this direction, made using electromagnetic probes, highlighting both improvements in the precision of charged-pion form factor data, achieved in the past decade, and new results on the neutral-pion transition…
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