From Experimental Data to Pole Parameters in a Direct Way (Angle Dependent Continuum Ambiguity and Laurent + Pietarinen Expansion)
A. \v{S}varc, Y. Wunderlich, H. Osmanovi\'c, M. Had\v{z}imehmedovi\'c,, R. Omerovi\'c, J. Stahov, V. Kashevarov, K. Nikonov, M. Ostrick, L. Tiator,, and R. Workman

TL;DR
This paper addresses the non-uniqueness of partial-wave amplitudes caused by continuum ambiguity and introduces a model-independent method using Laurent + Pietarinen expansion to reliably extract pole parameters directly from experimental data.
Contribution
It demonstrates how to remove phase ambiguity in partial waves and develops a new, simple Laurent + Pietarinen expansion method for extracting pole parameters from experimental data.
Findings
Phase rotation can remove non-uniqueness in partial waves.
The Laurent + Pietarinen expansion provides a reliable way to extract pole parameters.
The method is extendable to multi-channel cases.
Abstract
Unconstrained partial-wave amplitudes obtained at discrete energies from fits to complete sets of eight independent observables which are required to uniquely reconstruct reaction amplitudes do not vary smoothly with energy, and are in principle non-unique. We demonstrate how this behavior can be ascribed to the continuum ambiguity. Starting from the spinless scattering case, we demonstrate how an unknown overall phase depending on energy and angle mixes the structures seen in the associated partial-wave amplitudes making the partial wave decomposition non-unique, and illustrate it on a simple toy model. We then apply these principles to pseudo-scalar meson photoproduction and show that the non-uniqueness effect can be removed through a phase rotation generating "up-to-a-phase" unique set of SE partial wave amplitudes. Extracting pole positions from partial wave amplitudes is the next…
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