Light-Meson Spectroscopy with COMPASS
Bernhard Ketzer, Boris Grube, Dmitry Ryabchikov

TL;DR
The COMPASS experiment at CERN has conducted comprehensive studies of light meson spectra, providing evidence for exotic mesons and measuring radiative widths, thereby advancing understanding of QCD and hadron structure.
Contribution
This paper presents new high-precision analyses of light meson resonances, including evidence for exotic states and novel measurement techniques for radiative widths.
Findings
Evidence for the exotic $ extpi_1(1600)$ meson.
Observation of the $a_1(1420)$ meson outside the quark-model spectrum.
First measurement of the radiative width of the $ extpi_2(1670)$.
Abstract
Despite decades of research, we still lack a detailed quantitative understanding of the way quantum chromodynamics (QCD) generates the spectrum of hadrons. Precise experimental studies of the hadron excitation spectrum and the dynamics of hadrons help to improve models and to test effective theories and lattice QCD simulations. In addition, QCD seems to allow hadrons beyond the three-quark and quark-antiquark configurations of the constituent-quark model. These so-called exotic hadrons contain additional constituent (anti)quarks or excited gluonic fields that contribute to the quantum numbers of the hadron. The COMPASS experiment at CERN is studying the excitation spectrum of light mesons composed of up, down, and strange quarks. The excited mesons are produced via the strong interaction by scattering a 190 GeV/c pion beam off proton or nuclear targets. On heavy nuclear targets, in…
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