The decay widths of Υ(nS)→d^*(2380)+X with n=1,2,3 are studied in a phenomenological way. With the help of crossing symmetry, the decay widths are obtained by investigating the imaginary part of the forward sc...The decay widths of Υ(nS)→d^*(2380)+X with n=1,2,3 are studied in a phenomenological way. With the help of crossing symmetry, the decay widths are obtained by investigating the imaginary part of the forward scattering amplitudes between d^* and Υ(nS). The wave functions of d^* and deuteron obtained in previous studies are used for calculating the amplitude. The interaction between d^*(d) and Υ is governed by the quark-meson interaction, where the coupling constant is determined by fitting the observed widths of Υ(nS)→d+X. The numerical results show that the decay widths of Υ(nS)→d^*+X are about 2-10 times smaller than that of d+X. The calculated momentum of d^* is in the range 0.3-0.8 GeV. Therefore, it is very likely that one can find d^*(2380) in these semi-inclusive decay processes.展开更多
基金Supported by National Natural Sciences Foundations of China(11475186,11475192,11521505,11565007)the Sino-German CRC110 "Symmetries and the Emergence of Structure in QCD" project by NSFC(11621131001)+1 种基金the Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences,CAS,(Y7292610K1)the IHEP Innovation Fund(Y4545190Y2)
文摘The decay widths of Υ(nS)→d^*(2380)+X with n=1,2,3 are studied in a phenomenological way. With the help of crossing symmetry, the decay widths are obtained by investigating the imaginary part of the forward scattering amplitudes between d^* and Υ(nS). The wave functions of d^* and deuteron obtained in previous studies are used for calculating the amplitude. The interaction between d^*(d) and Υ is governed by the quark-meson interaction, where the coupling constant is determined by fitting the observed widths of Υ(nS)→d+X. The numerical results show that the decay widths of Υ(nS)→d^*+X are about 2-10 times smaller than that of d+X. The calculated momentum of d^* is in the range 0.3-0.8 GeV. Therefore, it is very likely that one can find d^*(2380) in these semi-inclusive decay processes.