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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 1998 Volume 168, Number 5, Pages 481–502 (Mi ufn1470)

This article is cited in 40 papers

REVIEWS OF TOPICAL PROBLEMS

The lightest scalar glueball

V. V. Anisovich

B. P. Konstantinov Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

Abstract: Recent studies of meson spectra have enabled the resonance structure of the $IJ^{\mathrm{PC}}=00^{++},10^{++},02^{++},12^{++}$, and $IJ^{\mathrm P}=\frac120^+$ waves to be found for masses ranging up to $1900$ MeV, thus fully reconstructing the $1^3\mathrm P_0\mathrm q\overline{\mathrm q}$ and $2^3\mathrm P_0\mathrm q\overline{\mathrm q}$ meson multiplets. There is firm experimental evidence for the existence of five scalar–isoscalar states in this mass range, four of which are $\mathrm q\overline{\mathrm q}$-states and members of the $1^3\mathrm P_0\mathrm q\overline{\mathrm q}$ and $2^3\mathrm P_0\mathrm q\overline{\mathrm q}$ nonets, whereas the fifth falls out of the quark picture and displays all the properties of the lightest possible scalar glueball. A dispersion analysis of the $00^{++}$ wave elucidates how the mixture of the pure glueball state (or gluonium) with neighboring scalar $\mathrm q\overline{\mathrm q}$-states forms: three scalar mesons, namely two relatively narrow$\mathrm f_0(1300)$ and $\mathrm f_0(1500)$ resonances and a very broad $\mathrm f_0(1530_{-250}^{+90})$ resonance, share the gluonium, the broad resonance being the gluonium's descendant and accounting for about $40$ to $50\%$ of it.

PACS: 12.39.Mk, 12.38.-t, 14.40.-n

Received: April 1, 1998

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0168.199805a.0481


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 1998, 41:5, 419–439

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