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Heavy quarkonium: progress, puzzles, and opportunities

Brambilla, N. and Eidelman, S. and Heltsley, B.K. and Vogt, R. and Bodwin, G.T. and others

Keywords

quarkonium: heavy | heavy ion: scattering | quarkonium: production | quark gluon: plasma | quantum chromodynamics: nonrelativistic | tetraquark | Brookhaven RHIC Coll | BES | Batavia TEVATRON Coll | Jefferson Lab | DESY HERA Stor | CLEO | B-factory | meson: hadron spectroscopy | quarkonium: decay | quarkonium: hadron spectroscopy | lattice field theory | effective field theory

Abstract

A golden age for heavy quarkonium physics dawned a decade ago, initiated by the confluence of exciting advances in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) and an explosion of related experimental activity. The early years of this period were chronicled in the Quarkonium Working Group (QWG) CERN Yellow Report (YR) in 2004, which presented a comprehensive review of the status of the field at that time and provided specific recommendations for further progress. However, the broad spectrum of subsequent breakthroughs, surprises, and continuing puzzles could only be partially anticipated. Since the release of the YR, the BESII program concluded only to give birth to BESIII_s19 the $B$-factories and CLEO-c flourished_s19 quarkonium production and polarization measurements at HERA and the Tevatron matured_s19 and heavy-ion collisions at RHIC have opened a window on the deconfinement regime. All these experiments leave legacies of quality, precision, and unsolved mysteries for quarkonium physics, and therefore beg for continuing investigations. The plethora of newly-found quarkonium-like states unleashed a flood of theoretical investigations into new forms of matter such as quark-gluon hybrids, mesonic molecules, and tetraquarks. Measurements of the spectroscopy, decays, production, and in-medium behavior of cbar{c}, bbar{b}, and bbar{c} bound states have been shown to validate some theoretical approaches to QCD and highlight lack of quantitative success for others. The intriguing details of quarkonium suppression in heavy-ion collisions that have emerged from RHIC have elevated the importance of separating hot- and cold-nuclear-matter effects in quark-gluon plasma studies. This review systematically addresses all these matters and concludes by prioritizing directions for ongoing and future efforts.

Information

Published
2011 as article (german)
Eur.Phys.J., C71 - page(s): 1534
Contact
Prof. Dr. Nora Brambilla
Type
theoretical work
Links
pdf
Related to the research area(s):
D
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