Resonances extracted in truncated partial-wave analysis are effective mixtures of angular momenta
A. \v{S}varc

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that truncated partial-wave analyses produce effective mixtures of angular momenta due to nonlinear bilinear fits, affecting resonance extraction.
Contribution
It reveals how truncation induces angular-momentum mixing in partial-wave analysis, impacting the interpretation of resonance-related quantities.
Findings
Fitted coefficients depend on higher-order contributions due to truncation.
Truncation leads to effective mixtures of angular momenta, not direct projections.
The mechanism applies broadly to scalar scattering and photoproduction observables.
Abstract
In truncated partial-wave analysis, one fits observables that are bilinear in the amplitudes rather than the amplitudes themselves. Truncation is therefore not merely a restriction of the amplitude basis, but of the bilinear interference terms admitted in the fit. As a result, the coefficients extracted in a truncated analysis are generally not projections of the coefficients of the full amplitude. Instead, they are determined by a coupled nonlinear fit in bilinear space and depend on combinations of the full coefficient set that contribute to the retained moments. We demonstrate this in a minimal scalar toy model, where a Hermitian bilinear generated by a Legendre expansion truncated at order 2 is approximated by one truncated at order 1. Even in this simplest case, the fitted low-order coefficients depend on bilinear combinations involving higher-order contributions of the original…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
