Transition from resonances to surface waves in \(\pi^+-p\) elastic scattering (Q935106)

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Transition from resonances to surface waves in \(\pi^+-p\) elastic scattering
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    Transition from resonances to surface waves in \(\pi^+-p\) elastic scattering (English)
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    31 July 2008
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    In this article, we study resonances and surface waves in \(\pi^+-p\) scattering. We focus on the sequence whose spin-parity values are given by \(J^p=\frac32^+,\frac72^+,\frac{11}{2}^+,\frac{15}{2}^+,\frac{19}{2}^+\). A widely-held belief takes for granted that this sequence can be connected by a moving pole in the complex angular momentum (CAM)-plane, which gives rise to a linear trajectory of the form \(J=\alpha_0+\alpha'm^2\), \(\alpha'\sim 1/(\text{GeV})^2\), which is the standard expression of the Regge pole trajectory. But the phenomenology shows that only the first few resonances lie on a trajectory of this type. For higher \(J^p\) this rule is violated and is substituted by the relation \(J\sim kR\), where \(k\) is the pion-nucleon c.m.s. momentum, and \(R\sim 1\) fm. In this article we prove: (a) Starting from a non-relativistic model of the proton, regarded as composed by three quarks confined by harmonic potentials, we prove that the first three members of this \(\pi^+-p\) resonance sequence can be associated with a vibrational spectrum of the proton generated by an algebra \(\mathfrak{sp}(3,\mathbb R)\). Accordingly, these first three members of the sequence can be described by Regge poles and lie on a standard linear trajectory. (b) At higher energies the amplitudes are dominated by diffractive scattering, and the creeping waves play a dominant role. They can be described by a second class of poles, which can be called Sommerfeld's poles, and lie on a line nearly parallel to the imaginary axis of the CAM-plane. (c) The Sommerfeld's pole which is closest to the real axis of the CAM-plane is dominant at large angles, and describes in a proper way the backward diffractive peak in both the following cases: at fixed \(k\), as a function of the scattering angle, and at fixed scattering angle \(\theta=\pi\), as a function of \(k\). (d) The evolution of this pole, as a function of \(k\), is given in first approximation by \(J\simeq kR\).
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    symplectic group
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    elastic scattering
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    resonance
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    surface wave
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    Regge poles
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