Perspective on the origin of hadron masses
Craig D. Roberts

TL;DR
This paper explores the fundamental origin of hadron masses through the energy-momentum tensor in QCD, explaining the contrasting mass results for protons and pions via dynamical chiral symmetry breaking.
Contribution
It provides a Poincaré-covariant explanation for the origin of hadron masses, unifying the proton and pion mass results through symmetry-driven cancellations in QCD.
Findings
The pion's mass-related matrix element vanishes due to symmetry cancellations.
Proton mass arises from the energy-momentum tensor anomaly in QCD.
DCSB explains the mass differences between hadrons.
Abstract
The energy-momentum tensor in chiral QCD, , exhibits an anomaly, viz. . Measured in the proton, this anomaly yields , where is the proton's mass; but, at the same time, when computed in the pion, the answer is . Any attempt to understand the origin and nature of mass, and identify observable expressions thereof, must explain and unify these two apparently contradictory results, which are fundamental to the nature of our Universe. Given the importance of Poincar\'e-invariance in modern physics, the utility of a frame-dependent approach to this problem seems limited. That is especially true of any approach tied to a rest-frame decomposition of because a massless particle does not possess a rest-frame. On the other hand, the dynamical chiral symmetry breaking (DCSB) paradigm, connected with a…
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