Open-flavor threshold effects on quarkonium spectrum in the BOEFT
Nora Brambilla, Abhishek Mohapatra, Tommaso Scirpa, Antonio Vairo

TL;DR
This paper uses the Born--Oppenheimer effective field theory to analyze how open-flavor thresholds influence the quarkonium spectrum, incorporating lattice QCD constraints and solving coupled Schr"odinger equations.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic EFT approach to quantify threshold effects on quarkonium, including spin splittings, validated by experimental data and theoretical comparisons.
Findings
Coupled Schr"odinger equations effectively model threshold effects.
Inclusion of spin splittings improves agreement with experimental data.
Provides a field-theoretical interpretation of the $^3P_0$ model constant.
Abstract
The impact of open-flavor thresholds on the quarkonium spectrum has been a subject of study since the introduction of the Cornell potential and has been quantified through various phenomenological approaches, most notably the model. We revisit this problem using the Born--Oppenheimer effective field theory (BOEFT), an effective field theory systematically derived from QCD by exploiting hierarchies of energy scales and symmetries. Within the BOEFT, open-flavor threshold effects emerge from the mixing between quarkonium and tetraquark static potentials sharing the same Born--Oppenheimer quantum numbers. The shapes of the static potentials are constrained by lattice QCD calculations. Furthermore, we account for the distinctive behavior of the BOEFT tetraquark static potentials at short and large distances: at short distances they are repulsive, reflecting the color-octet…
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