The kaonic atoms research program at DA{\Phi}NE: from SIDDHARTA to SIDDHARTA-2
A. Scordo, A. Amirkhani, M. Bazzi, G. Bellotti, C. Berucci, D. Bosnar,, A.M. Bragadireanu, M. Cargnelli, C. Curceanu, A. Dawood Butt, R. Del Grande,, L. Fabbietti, C. Fiorini, F. Ghio, C. Guaraldo, R.S. Hayano, M. Iliescu, M., Iwasaki, P. Levi Sandri, J. Marton, M. Miliucci

TL;DR
This paper reviews the progress of the SIDDHARTA experiment at DAΦNE, focusing on kaonic atoms to understand low-energy antikaon-nucleon interactions, and discusses upgrades for the upcoming SIDDHARTA-2 experiment to improve measurements.
Contribution
It introduces the SIDDHARTA-2 upgrade aimed at precisely measuring kaonic deuterium, advancing understanding of kaon-nucleon interactions at low energies.
Findings
Precise measurement of kaonic hydrogen energy shift and width.
Progress in theoretical models constrained by SIDDHARTA data.
Development of upgraded experimental techniques for kaonic atom studies.
Abstract
The interaction of antikaons with nucleons and nuclei in the low-energy regime represents an active research field in hadron physics with still many important open questions. The investigation of light kaonic atoms, in which one electron is replaced by a negatively charged kaon, is a unique tool to provide precise information on this interaction; the energy shift and the broadening of the low-lying states of such atoms, induced by the kaon-nucleus hadronic interaction, can be determined with high precision from the atomic X-ray spectroscopy, and this experimental method provides unique information to understand the low energy kaon-nucleus interaction at the production threshold. The lightest atomic systems, like the kaonic hydrogen and the kaonic deuterium deliver, in a model-independent way, the isospin-dependent kaon-nucleon scattering lengths. The most precise kaonic hydrogen…
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