Heavy quarks and strong binding: A field theory of hadron structure
Author(s) -
William A. Bardeen,
Michael S. Chanowitz,
Sidney D. Drell,
Marvin Weinstein,
T. -M. Yan
Publication year - 1975
Publication title -
physical review. d. particles, fields, gravitation, and cosmology/physical review. d. particles and fields
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1089-4918
pISSN - 0556-2821
DOI - 10.1103/physrevd.11.1094
Subject(s) - physics , quark , particle physics , hadron , bound state , baryon , meson , gluon , wave function , quantum mechanics
We investigate in canonical field theory the possibility that quarks may exist in isolation as very heavy particles, M quark >> 1 GeV, yet form strongly bound hadronic states, Mhadron N 1 GeV. In a model with spin5 quarks coupled to scalar gluons we find that a mechanism exists for the formation of bound states which are much lighter than the free constituents. Following Nambu, a color interaction mediated by gauge ,vector mesons is introduced to guarantee that all states with non-vanishing triality have masses much larger than 1 GeV. The possibility of such a solution to a strongly coupled fie’ld theory is exhibited by a calculation employing the variational princi@e in tree approximation. This procedure reduces the field theoretical problem to a set of couljled differential . equations for classical fields which are just the free parameters of the variational state. A striking property of the solution is that the quark wave function is confined to a thin shell at the surface of the hadronic bound state. Though the quantum corrections to this procedure remain to be investigated systematically, we explore some of the phenomenological im@ications of the trial wave functions so obtained. In particular, we exhibit the low-lying meson and baryon multi@lets of SU(6); their magnetic moments, charge radii, and radiative decays; and the axial charge of the baryons. States of non-vanishing momenta are constructed and the softness of the hadron shell to deformations in scattering processes is discussed qualitatively along with the implications for deep inelastic electron scattering and dual resonance models.
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