Friday, September 7, 2012

1209.1313 (S. Coito et al.)

Is the X(3872) a molecule?    [PDF]

S. Coito, G. Rupp, E. van Beveren
Because of the controversial X(3872) meson's very close proximity to the $D^0\bar{D}^{*0}$ threshold, this charmonium-like resonance is often considered a meson-meson molecule. However, a molecular wave function must be essentially of a meson-meson type, viz. $D^0\bar{D}^{*0}$ in this case, with no other significant components. We address this issue by employing a simple two-channel Schr\"odinger model, in which the $J^{PC}=1^{++}$ $c\bar{c}$ and $D^0\bar{D}^{*0}$ channels can communicate via the $^3P_0$ mechanism, mimicked by string breaking at a sharp distance $a$. Thus, wave functions and their probabilities are computed, for different bound-state pole positions approaching the $D^0\bar{D}^{*0}$ threshold from below. We conclude that at the PDG X(3872) mass and for reasonable values of $a$, viz. 2.0 to 3.0 GeV$^{-1}$, the $c\bar{c}$ component remains quite substantial and certainly not negligible, despite accounting for only about 6 to 10% of the total wave-function probability, owing to the naturally long tail of the $D^0\bar{D}^{*0}$ component.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1209.1313

No comments:

Post a Comment