Strange Hadron Spectroscopy with the KLong Facility at Jefferson Lab
Sean Dobbs (For the KLF Collaboration)

TL;DR
The paper discusses the upcoming KLF experiment at Jefferson Lab, which aims to significantly improve the understanding of strange quark hadron spectra using a high-intensity $K_L$ beam and the GlueX detector.
Contribution
It introduces a new experimental setup at Jefferson Lab to explore strange hadron spectroscopy with unprecedented data collection capabilities.
Findings
Enhanced data collection for strange hadrons.
Improved understanding of strange quark hadron spectrum.
Potential discoveries in strange hadron states.
Abstract
The strange quark hadrons sit at an important crossroads between the light and heavy quark hadrons, but their spectrum is comparatively poorly known. The KLF experiment was recently approved to run in Hall D of Jefferson Lab, and will use an intense secondary beam of mesons with the existing GlueX spectrometer to collect data several orders of magnitude larger than existing dataset. In this talk, I will discuss the expected physics reach of this experiment and the status of its preparations.
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · High-Energy Particle Collisions Research
