Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9860849 | Physics Letters B | 2005 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The recently observed Y(4260) lies far above the decay threshold with a width less than 100 MeV. We argue that it is very difficult to accommodate Y(4260) as a conventional cc¯ radial excitation or a D-wave state. It cannot be a hadronic molecule. Its production mechanism and special decay pattern do not favor the glueball interpretation. If Y(4260) is a scalar tetraquark, it must be produced by the I=0 component of the virtual photon. Then the I=1,Iz=0 component of the virtual photon should have produced its isovector partner Yâ²(4260), which may be searched for in the decay channel Ï+ÏâÏ0J/Ï using exactly the same database from the initial state radiation process. The observation/non-observation of Yâ²(4260) can easily confirm/reject the tetraquark hypothesis. However, a tetraquark far above threshold can fall apart into DD¯,D*D¯ very easily. Its not-so-large width and the non-observation of DD¯ mode tend to disfavor the tetraquark hypothesis. Hence the only feasible interpretation is a hybrid charmonium if Y(4260) is NOT an experimental artifact. At present, none of the experimental information from BaBar measurement is in conflict with the hybrid charmonium picture.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Authors
Shi-Lin Zhu,