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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