Baryon spectroscopy
Abstract
About 120 baryons and baryon resonances are known, from the abundant nucleon with u and d light-quark constituents up to the Ξb-=(bsd) , which contains one quark of each generation and to the recently discovered Ωb-=(bss) . In spite of this impressively large number of states, the underlying mechanisms leading to the excitation spectrum are not yet understood. Heavy-quark baryons suffer from a lack of known spin parities. In the light-quark sector, quark-model calculations have met with considerable success in explaining the low-mass excitations spectrum but some important aspects such as the mass degeneracy of positive-parity and negative-parity baryon excitations remain unclear. At high masses, above 1.8GeV , quark models predict a very high density of resonances per mass interval which is not yet observed. In this review, issues are identified discriminating between different views of the resonance spectrum; prospects are discussed on how open questions in baryon spectroscopy may find answers from photoproduction and electroproduction experiments which are presently carried out in various laboratories.
- Publication:
-
Reviews of Modern Physics
- Pub Date:
- April 2010
- DOI:
- 10.1103/RevModPhys.82.1095
- arXiv:
- arXiv:0901.2055
- Bibcode:
- 2010RvMP...82.1095K
- Keywords:
-
- 12.39.-x;
- 13.60.-r;
- 13.75.-n;
- 14.20.-c;
- Phenomenological quark models;
- Photon and charged-lepton interactions with hadrons;
- Hadron-induced low- and intermediate-energy reactions and scattering;
- Baryons;
- High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
- E-Print:
- Review article, 53 pages, 40 figures, 23 Tables. Review of Modern Physics (accepted for publication)