Abstract
We construct the D4/D8 brane configuration in the Witten–Sakai–Sugimoto model by introducing a pair of heavy flavour brane with a heavy-light open string. The multiplets created by the heavy-light string acquire mass due to the finite separation of the heavy and light flavour branes thus they could be identified as the heavy-light meson fields in this model. On the other hand the glueball field is identified as the gravitational fluctuations carried by the close string in the bulk, so this model is able to describe the interaction of glueball and heavy-light meson through the open-close string interaction in gauge-gravity duality. We explicitly derive the effective action for the various glueballs and heavy-light mesons then numerically evaluate the associated lowest coupling constants. Afterwards the decay/production widths of various glueballs involving the lowest heavy-light meson, which is identified as \(D^{0}\) meson, are calculated by using our effective action which might be remarkable to theoretically study the charm oscillation e.g. \(D^{0}-{\bar{D}}^{0}\), \(B_{s}-{\bar{B}}_{s}\) decay/production in hadron physics. This work extends the previous investigations of glueball in holographic QCD and it is also a further prediction of glueball-meson interaction.
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1 Introduction
In nuclear physics, quantum chromodynamics (QCD) as the underlying theory of the strong interaction allows to form bound states of pure gauge bosons due to its nonabelian nature. These bound states are named as “glueball”s [1,2,3] which are usually denoted by a range of quantum numbers \(J^{PC}\) where J,P,C represents total spin, parity and charge conjugation respectively. For instance, the lowest glueball takes the quantum numbers of the vacuum as \(J^{PC}=0^{++}\). In Yang–Mills theory, glueball is believed as the only possible composite particle states and its spectrum has been detailedly studied by using lattice method [4,5,6]. While the evident existence of the glueball is expected, their experimental identification in the hadron spectra is challenging. This difficulty is mostly due to the mixing of glueball with \(q{\bar{q}}\) (quark and anti-quark) states which have the same quantum numbers of the glueball in the presence of quarks. Nonetheless the mass of the lightest scalar glueball is predicted to be around 1600–1800 MeV by the simulations of lattice QCD [4, 7]. However the coupling and decay/production widths of glueball have not been explicitly provided by the current status of lattice QCD since lattice theory including dynamical quarks expressed with real-time quantities would become extremely complexed.
Additional to the lattice gauge theory, an alternatively different approach to investigate strongly coupled quantum field theory has been proposed in [8, 9] which is the famous anti-de Sitter/conformal field theory (AdS/CFT) correspondence, or more generally, the gauge-gravity (string) duality. In the AdS/CFT correspondence, the correlation functions of gauge invariant operators with the limitation of large \(N_{c}\) (colour number) and large ’t Hooft coupling \(\lambda \) are mapped to the perturbations of the geometrical backgrounds in classical supergravity. So the correlation functions of strongly coupled quantum field theory could be calculated by the weakly coupled gravity theory in which the perturbation method is valid [10]. Significantly, a top-down construction for QCD based on \(N_{c}\) D4-branes compactified on a circle in type-IIA string theory was proposed by Witten in 1998 [11] in which both supersymmetry and conformal symmetry are broken below a Kaluza–Klein mass scale \(M_{KK}\), so that the dual field theory is four-dimensional pure Yang–Mills theory in the large-\(N_{c}\) limit. By embedding \(N_{f}\) pairs of coincident D8- and anti D8-branes (\(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane) as flavours into this D4-brane configuration, quarks in the fundamental representation of flavour and colour have been introduced into this model by Sakai and Sugimoto in 2004 [12, 13]. Hence this model, named as the Witten–Sakai–Sugimoto (WSS) model, becomes remarkably successful since it almost contains all necessary ingredients of QCD and it is able to reproduce various fundamental features of low-energy nuclear physics with few parameters [14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21].
Particularly the glueball field in this model is identified as the gravitational perturbations in the bulk supergravity while meson and baryon states are created by the open strings on the flavoured \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane and “baryonic D4-branes”.Footnote 1 So this model naturally includes the interaction of glueball and hadron which is nothing but the open-close string interaction in the viewpoint of string theory. Specifically the mass spectrum of glueball could be obtained by evaluating the eigen equation of the bulk graviton and the glueball-hadron interaction would arise in the Dirac–Born–Infield (DBI) action of the D-brane once the gravitational perturbation is involved [23,24,25,26,27].
In this paper, we will focus on the glueball-meson interaction by including the heavy flavour in order to extend the investigation in [25, 26] with this model. Since the fundamental quarks in this model are created by the open string with one end attached to the D4-brane and the other end to the \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane which has zero length, it implies the fundamental quarks are massless. Thus the meson states consisted of these massless quarks are usually identified as the light flavour mesons, such as \(\pi ,\rho \) meson. To involve the heavy flavour, we are going to employ the mechanism proposed in [28, 29], that is to introduce another pair of flavoured \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane (as heavy flavour branes) separated from the other coincident \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane (as light flavour branes) with a open string (as heavy-light string) stretched between them as illustrated in Fig. 2. Accordingly the multiplets created by the heavy-light string acquire mass due to the finite separation of the heavy and light flavour branes. So the model is able to include the heavy-light flavoured mesons with massive quarks in this approach and the mechanism is recognized as the “Higgs mechanism” in string theory [30, 31]. Then the action for the interaction of glueball and heavy-light flavoured mesons could be derived by combining the gravitational perturbations in the bulk with the heavy-light meson fields on the flavour branes. As the most simple example, we finally evaluate the decay/production rates of glueball involving the lowest heavy-light mesons by using our effective action which might be remarkable to study charm oscillation as an effective theory e.g. \(D^{0}-{\bar{D}}^{0}\) , \(B_{s}-{\bar{B}}_{s}\) decay/production in [32, 33] and the glueball decay/production involving the heavy-light mesons in hadron physics. Our results are also in agreement with the previous works in [25, 26, 34].
The organization of this manuscript is as follows. In Sect. 2, we review the relation of 11d M-theory and type IIA string theory by their corresponding supergravity. We also give the dynamics of the glueball from these supergravity systems in holography. In section 3, we briefly review the setup of the flavours in the WSS model and discuss how to involve the heavy flavour and heavy-light mesons. In Sect. 4, we detailedly derive the effective action for the interaction of various glueball and heavy-light meson in holography. In Sect. 5, we identify the lowest heavy-light meson in the model as the lowest D-meson through some experimental data and we use our effective action to compute the decay/production width of the glueball involving \(D^{0}\) meson. The final section is the summary and our discussion about this work. At the end of this manuscript, we collect some essential discussion about the supergravity, the dynamics of D-brane, the supersymmetry, the glueball-light meson interaction and the holographic renormalization of this model in Appendix A, B, C, D respectively which are also useful to this work.
2 The dynamics of glueball
2.1 The geometry in supergravity
The WSS model is based on the \(\mathrm {AdS_{7}}/\mathrm {CFT_{\mathrm {6}}}\) correspondence obtained by coincident \(N_{c}\) M5-branes in 11-dimensional (11d) M-theory and the dual field theory on the M5-brane is a 6-dimensional (0, 2) superconformal field theory. The effective supergravity description provides a 11d geometrical near-horizon solution which takes the topology of \(AdS_{7}\times S^{4}\). Let us denote the extended directions of the M5-branes by \(\left\{ X^{\mu },X^{4},X^{11}\right\} \) with indices \(\mu ,\nu =0,1,2,3\), so the 11d non-extremal black brane solution is given as [30],Footnote 2
where \(\Omega _{4},L\) denotes the volume element on \(S^{4}\) and the curvature radius of the \(\mathrm {AdS_{7}}\) respectively. The indices i, j run from 1 to 3 and r represents the radius coordinate of the transverse directions. Note that this background also contains a non-vanished Ramond–Ramond strength \(F_{4}\) with \(N_{c}\) units of flux on \(S^{4}\). As the 11d M-theory compactified on a cycle is equivalent to 10d type-IIA string theory, one can obtain non-conformal D4-branes by the dimensional reduction which preserves circle with
Afterwards, the dual field theory becomes a 5d super Yang–Mills theory on the D4-branes.
In order to obtain a pure Yang–Mills or QCD-like theory, a further compactification with a double Wick-rotation was proposed by Witten based on the above holographic duality. Accordingly the metric (2.1) with the double Wick-rotation \(X^{0}\rightarrow -iX^{4},X^{4}\rightarrow -iX^{0}\) corresponds to a bubble configuration of D4-brane which is given as [11, 12],
so that the dual field theory exhibits confinements in this geometry. The supersymmetry of the D4-branes is broken down by compactifying \(X^{4}\) on another circle, hence the fermionic gluinos become massive at tree level by imposing the antiperiodic boundary conditions and the adjoint scalars also acquire masses through its loop corrections. Therefore the gauge bosons are the only degrees of freedom in the limit of large Kaluza–Klein (KK) mass scale. Employing the relations of the dimensional reduction, the 10d metric could be written as [25, 26, 35],
where \(M=0,1 \ldots 9\) and \(\Phi =\frac{3}{2}\ln \left( \frac{r}{L}\right) \) is the 10d dilaton field. Note that according to the above discussion we have \(A_{m}=0\) and a periodic condition for \(X^{4}\),
The relation of \(r_{KK}\) and \(M_{KK}\) can be determined by eliminating the conical singularity at \(r=r_{KK}\). Using alternative radial coordinates \(U\in [U_{KK},+\infty )\) and \(Z\in [-\infty ,+\infty )\) defined as
the 10d metric in (2.4) can be explicitly written as,
where \(\epsilon _{4}\) denotes a unit volume element on \(S^{4}\) and \(F_{4}\) is the field strength of the Ramond–Ramond form \(C_{3}\). Note that the metric in (2.7) corresponds to D4 bubble configuration which is obtained by a double Wick-rotation from the black brane solution. And the 11th direction \(X^{11}\) becomes vanished in the large \(N_{c}\) limit. In terms of QCD variables we additionally have the following relations,
where \(\lambda ,g_{\mathrm {YM}},g_{s},l_{s}\) respectively represents the ’t Hooft coupling constant, Yang–Mills coupling constant, string coupling constant and the length of string.
2.2 Gravitational fluctuations as the glueball field in holography
Since glueball is the gauge invariant composite state in the Yang-Mills theory, they holographically corresponds to the gravitational perturbations of the near-horizon geometry in the supergravity description [23,24,25,26,27]. Such metric fluctuations are sourced by the operators in the dual field theory i.e. the 5d compactified Yang–Mills theory. Hence let us introduce the gravitational perturbations to the background (2.3) by rewriting the 11d metric as \(G_{MN}\rightarrow G_{MN}^{\left( 0\right) }+\delta G_{MN}\) where \(G_{MN}^{\left( 0\right) }\) refers to the metric in (2.3). And it would be convenient to integrate over the \(S^{4}\) in the 11d supergravity action since \(S^{4}\) is not very necessary in the following discussion. So we can obtain the kinetic action for glueball by imposing the metric (2.3) into the 11d supergravity action and it leads to,
where \(S_{G}\) denotes the kinetic term of the glueball and \({\mathcal {C}}_{E,D,T}\) is a constant determined by the various gravitational fluctuations. Note that the pre-factor in the above action has to be normalized as \(\frac{1}{2\kappa _{11}^{2}}\left( \frac{L}{2}\right) ^{4}\Omega _{4}{\mathcal {C}}_{E,D,T}=1\) in which \({\mathcal {C}}_{E,D,T}\) is completely fixed. We will use this action to discuss the dynamics of the glueball with various gravitational perturbations in the the rest of the manuscript.
2.2.1 The exotic scalar glueball
The lowest exotic scalar glueball has quantum number \(J^{CP}=0^{++}\) which corresponds to the exotic polarizations of the bulk graviton. The 11d components of \(\delta G_{MN}\) are given as [26],
where the eigenvalue equation for function \(H_{E}\left( r\right) \) is,
Note that the above components in (2.10) involve asymptotics in the bulk as \(\delta G_{44}=-4\delta G_{11}=-4\delta G_{22}=-4\delta G_{33}=-4\delta G_{11,11}\) for \(r\rightarrow \infty \). Imposing the metric (2.3) with fluctuations (2.10) and the eigenvalue equation for function \(H_{E}\left( r\right) \) into action (2.9), we obtain the kinetic term of the exotic scalar glueball which is,
where
2.2.2 The dilatonic and tensor glueball
The scalar glueball of \(0^{++}\) mode corresponds to the fluctuations of the metric as [26],
We refer to the upon mode as “dilatonic” since \(\delta G_{11,11}\) reduces to the 10d dilaton.
The tensor glueball with \(J^{CP}=2^{++}\) corresponds to the metric fluctuations which includes a transverse traceless polarization. A choice of the non-vanishing components of the graviton polarizations could be,
where \(T_{\mu \nu }\equiv {\mathcal {T}}_{\mu \nu }G_{T}\left( x\right) \). \({\mathcal {T}}_{\mu \nu }\) is a constant symmetric tensor normalized as \({\mathcal {T}}_{\mu \nu }{\mathcal {T}}^{\mu \nu }=1\) and satisfies the traceless condition \(\eta ^{\mu \nu }{\mathcal {T}}_{\mu \nu }=0\). The eigenvalue equation for functions \(H_{D,T}\left( r\right) \) are given as,
Plugging metric (2.3) with fluctuations (2.14) and (2.15) into action (2.9) respectively leads to the dynamics of the dilatonic scalar and tensor glueball,
where the corresponding normalization constant is,
3 The flavours and mesons
3.1 The light flavour and meson
There are also flavours in this model which are introduced by embedding a stack of \(N_{f}\) probe D8- and anti-D8-branes (\(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane) at the antipodal position of the background geometry. The configurations of the various branes are illustrated in Table 1.
The \(N_{f}\) flavoured fermions arise from the lowest modes of the 4–8 stringsFootnote 3 and \(4-{\bar{8}}\) strings which belong to the fundamental representation of the colour group \(U\left( N_{c}\right) \) and flavour group \(U\left( N_{f}\right) \). In order to define the chirality of these fundamental fermions, a natural choice is to perform the GSO (Gliozzi–Scherk–Olive) projection [12, 36]. Since the GSO projection for \(4-8\) strings is opposite to the projection chosen for the \(4-{\bar{8}}\) strings, these fundamental fermions could be interpreted as quarks with opposite chiralities in QCD. And the gauge symmetry introduced by \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes can be therefore denoted as \(U\left( N_{f}\right) _{L}\times U\left( N_{f}\right) _{R}\), namely the chiral symmetry. Note that the 4–8/\({\bar{8}}\) strings has zero length in this D4/D8 configuration, the fundamental fermions are therefore massless which correspond accordingly to the light flavoured quarks in QCD. In this sense it motivates us to name these flavour branes as “light flavour branes”. As shown in Table 1, the quarks and anti-quarks live on the separate position of \(X^{4}\). However the global chiral symmetry \(U\left( N_{f}\right) _{L}\times U\left( N_{f}\right) _{R}\) is broken spontaneously since the geometry of the D4 bubble configuration forces the \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane to be connected at the bottom of the bulk as illustrated in Fig. 1.
Thus the induced metric on the flavour branes could be straightforward obtained by putting \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes onshell i.e. imposing the condition \(\frac{dx^{4}}{dU}=0\), then we have,
where the indices M, N run over the flavour brane. So the action of the joined light flavour branes describes the dynamics of \(q{\bar{q}}\) mesons, which contains the light quarks only, through the flavoured gauge fields on the worldvolume of the \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes. The explicit form of the action is,
whereFootnote 4
Here g and \(\Phi \) is the induced metric and dilaton given in (2.7), (3.1), respectively. F refers to the field strength of the flavoured gauge field \(A_{M}\) on the D8-branes which is defined as \(F_{MN}=\partial _{M}A_{N}-\partial _{N}A_{M}+\left[ A_{M},A_{N}\right] \)Footnote 5. Note that in this model the non-zero components of the gauge field \(A_{M}\) are only \(\left\{ A_{\mu },A_{Z}\right\} \) which are functions dependent on the coordinates \(\left\{ x^{\mu },Z\right\} \). Since the flavour branes are probes, we could obtain the following 5d quadratic action after imposing the solution (3.1), (2.7)–(3.3) and integrating over \(S^{4}\) which is,
where
The light flavour meson fields are identified as the expansion modes of \(A_{M}\) by a complete sets \(\left\{ \psi _{n}\right\} \) in the model. Explicitly \(A_{M}\) is assumed to be expanded asFootnote 6,
so the lowest mode of \(A_{\mu }\) and \(A_{Z}\) could be interpreted as the lightest vector \(\rho \) meson and scalar \(\pi \) meson. Therefore if we identify \(B_{\mu }^{\left( 1\right) }\left( x\right) =\rho _{\mu }\left( x\right) ,\varphi ^{\left( 0\right) }\left( x\right) =U_{KK}\pi \left( x\right) \) with the normalization,
the effective 4d action of \(\pi \) and \(\rho \) meson denoted by \(S_{\pi -\rho }^{\mathrm {eff}}\) can be obtained from (3.4) whose form isFootnote 7,
The Chern–Simons (CS) term in (3.3) corresponds to the Wess–Zumino–Witten (WZW) term in chiral QCD. However we will not discuss its explicit form in this manuscript because it is independent on the metric thus does not include the interaction of meson and glueball.
3.2 The heavy flavour and heavy-light flavoured meson
The heavy flavour could be introduced into this model by considering an extra pair of flavoured \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane which is separated from the other \(N_{f}\) (light-flavoured) \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes with an open string (the heavy-light string) stretched between them [28, 29, 37, 38] as illustrated in Fig. 2. According to string theory, the heavy-light (HL) string stretched between the separated branes creates additional multiplets which could be approximated near the worldvolume of the light flavour branes by local vector fields. Due to the finite separation of the heavy and light flavour branes, the HL-string has a non-zero length so that those multiplets acquire mass through the non-zero vacuum expectation value (VEV) of the HL-string. Hence the multiplets could be interpreted as the heavy-flavoured mesons with massive quarks. We note that this mechanism to acquire the massive fields is exactly the “Higgs mechanism” in string theory [30].
In order to include HL-multiple states in the actions (3.3), we need to replace the gauge fields on the light flavour branes by its matrix-valued formula according to string theory,
In our setup \(\varvec{\mathrm {A}}_{M}\) is \(\left( N_{f}+1\right) \times \left( N_{f}+1\right) \) matrix-valued 1-form while \(A_{M}\) is \(N_{f}\times N_{f}\) valued 1-form. And \(\Phi _{M}\) is \(N_{f}\times 1\) valued vector. Thus the field strength of \(\varvec{\mathrm {A}}_{M}\) becomes a matrix-valued 2-form as,
And we have assumed that the non-zero components of \(\Phi _{M}\) are \(\left\{ \Phi _{\mu },\Phi _{Z}\right\} \) which depends only on \(\left\{ x^{\mu },Z\right\} \) in order to be compatible with \(A_{M}\). Plugging (3.9), (3.10) into the quadratic action (3.4), we obtain the action as,
where “\(\mathrm {Tr}\)” refers to the “flavour trace” and
Note that the DBI action has to involve the transverse modes of the brane since the HL-string with finite separation provides a non-zero VEV in our setup. For the reader’s convenience, we have summarized the essential derivations to obtain the quadratic action in (3.3) from the complete DBI action with non-Abelian excitation in the Appendix B. Then let us denote the only one transverse “coordinate” as \(\Psi \) for D8-branes and its T-dualitized action is given as,
with \(D_{M}\Psi =\partial _{M}\Psi +\left[ \varvec{\mathrm {A}}_{M},\Psi \right] \) and \({\tilde{T}}_{8}=\left( 2\pi \alpha ^{\prime }\right) ^{2}T_{8}\). By the extrema of the potential contribution or \(\left[ \Psi ,\left[ \Psi ,\Psi \right] \right] =0\), we can define the moduli solution of \(\Psi \) for \(N_{f}\) light branes separated from one heavy brane with a finite VEV v as [30, 31, 37,38,39],
By using the solution (3.15), the action (3.14) could be rewritten as,
We note here the total action of the light flavour branes involving the HL fields is collected as,
where \(S_{\mathrm {CS}}\) takes the same formula as (3.3) but replacing \(F\rightarrow \varvec{\mathrm {F}}\).
Along the discussion in the sector of light flavour , we further assume that the HL-multiplet \(\Phi _{M}\) could be in general expanded as [28],
By inserting (3.18) into the the equations of motion following from (3.17), for the transverse mode we can choose the decomposition as,
which leads to the action of the heavy-light vector meson field,
with the normalization condition
For the longitudinal modes, the decomposition of \(\Phi _{M}\) could be chosen asFootnote 8
and the renormalization for \({\tilde{\phi }}_{m}\) is suggested as
then we can obtain the kinetic term of the massive (pseudo) scalar HL-fields from (3.12) (3.16) which is,
where,
Note that \(M_{V},M_{S}\) relate to the mass term of the heavy-light meson fields while \(M_{V},M_{S}\) might be theoretically divergent because they are defined by an integral (3.25). The potential infinities in \(M_{V}\) and \(M_{S}\) originate from the infinite volume of the spacetime which could always and systematically be removed by the holographic renormalization e.g. in [17, 21, 40, 41]. We give a brief discussion about this in the Appendix D.
4 The interactions of glueball and heavy-light flavoured mesons
Since the gravitational perturbation signals the glueball states in holography, let us include the gravitational fluctuations in this section in order to obtain the effective Lagrangian of glueball and mesons. The glueball field could be involved by replacing the metric by \(G\rightarrow G+\delta G\) as we discussed in Sect. 1, the interaction of glueball and various mesons will therefore arise once we add the gravitational fluctuations to the terms depended on the metric in the action. Accordingly it only concerns the Yang-Mills action (3.10) and the mass term (3.16) since the Chern–Simons action in (3.3) is independent on the metric. Thus let us first rewrite the Yang–Mills action (3.10) as,
where \(S_{\mathrm {L}},S_{\mathrm {HL}}\) refers to the kinetic terms of light and HL-mesons given respectively in (3.8) (3.20) and
The coupling terms of light mesons and glueball, HL-mesons and glueball, HL- and light meson, light and HL-meson with glueball have been respectively denoted by using the index “L-G” “HL-G” “HL-L” “HL-L-G” in the action (4.1). Note that only the linear terms of the glueball field are valid since the gravitational fluctuations are perturbations in the supergravity description. Then the 10d metric involving the 11d fluctuations is given as,
with the dilaton,
We would explicitly derive the general form of the effective action for glueball and mesons by considering the various gravitational fluctuations \(\delta G\) in the following subsections. Note that the coupling term for the transverse modes of the HL meson (vector) could be obtained by replacing \({\tilde{\phi }}_{m}\left( Z\right) \rightarrow 0\) and the coupling terms for the longitudinal modes (scalar) can be obtained by replacing \(Q_{\mu ,m}\left( x\right) \rightarrow \partial _{\mu }Q_{m}\left( x\right) U_{KK},{\tilde{\phi }}_{m}\left( Z\right) \rightarrow \partial _{Z}\phi _{m}\left( Z\right) \) which could simplify the formulas in the pertinent situations.
4.1 Involving the exotic scalar glueball
Let us start with the 10d metric (2.7) involving the exotic polarizations of the bulk graviton given in (2.10). Substituting (4.3), (4.4) with (2.10), (3.18) into action (4.2), we can obtain the coupling terms of the glueball and mesons. Although the calculation is very straightforward, the result might be a little messy. Let us keep the quadratic terms of \(\Phi _{M}\) as the effective action (4.2), so the interaction terms of glueball and meson are collected as follows,Footnote 9
where
Note that \({\mathcal {I}}_{\mu \nu \rho \sigma }\) satisfies the relation \({\mathcal {I}}_{\mu \nu \rho \sigma }=-{\mathcal {I}}_{\mu \nu \sigma \rho }=-{\mathcal {I}}_{\nu \mu \rho \sigma },\ \mathrm {Tr}{\mathcal {I}}_{\mu \nu \rho \sigma }=\mathrm {Tr}{\mathcal {I}}_{\rho \sigma \mu \nu }\). And we also have,
where
For the terms in \(S_{3}\), respectively they are,
and all the coefficients are given as,
Additionally we have another coupling from the mass terms (3.16) which is,
where \(\alpha _{E}=\frac{\left( 1+N_{f}\right) v}{N_{f}M_{E}}\frac{v_{S}}{v_{V}}\) and the coefficients are,
The total action of the exotic scalar glueball and various mesons could be obtained by collecting all the terms in (4.1) and (4.19) with the kinetic term of the glueball in (2.12).
4.2 Involving the dilatonic scalar glueball
The effective action of the dilatonic glueball and mesons could be directly obtained by plugging (4.3), (4.4) with the dilatonic polarizations (2.14) into action (4.2). We find that the interaction terms \(S_{i}^{HL-L}\) in (4.2) remains since they are independent on the metric fluctuations. So the interaction terms of dilatonic glueball and mesons can be collected as
where \(S_{i}^{L-G_{D}},S_{i}^{HL-G_{D}},S_{i}^{HL-L-G_{D}}\) takes the same formulas as in the case of the exotic scalar glueball while the coefficients have to be replaced by \({\mathcal {B}}_{1,2}^{E},{\mathcal {C}}_{1,2}^{E},{\mathcal {D}}_{1,2}^{E}\rightarrow {\mathcal {B}}_{1,2}^{D},{\mathcal {C}}_{1,2}^{D},{\mathcal {D}}_{1,2}^{D}\). And the corresponding coefficients are given as,
The coupling term \(S_{m}^{HL-G_{D}}\) for the dilatonic glueball from the mass terms (3.16) also takes the same formula as in (4.19) while the coefficients need to be replaced as \(s_{mn}^{\left( 1,2\ldots 6\right) }\rightarrow d_{mn}^{\left( 1,2\ldots 6\right) }\) and \(d_{mn}^{\left( 1,2\ldots 6\right) }\)’s are given as,
So the total action for the interaction of dilatonic scalar glueball and meson could also be collected from (4.5)–(4.17) and (4.19) while the coefficients are replaced by (4.22) and (4.23).
4.3 Involving the tensor glueball
The interaction terms of tensor glueball and mesons can be collected by inserting (4.3), (4.4) with the polarizations (2.15) into (3.11) and (3.16). As before, let us rewrite the interaction terms involving the tensor glueball in the action as,
where their explicit formulas are collected as,
and
The coupling from the mass term (3.16) is given as,
where the corresponding coefficients in above actions are,
5 Interaction of glueball and the lowest heavy-light meson in holography
Since the lowest heavy-light meson is recognized as D-meson, let us identify the lowest heavy-light meson field in our theory as the lowest D-meson field (i.e. the \(D^{0}\) meson) and investigate the decay/production of glueball to/from them holographically in this section. And it may provide a holographic way to study the \(D^{0}-{\bar{D}}^{0}\) or \(B_{s}-{\bar{B}}_{s}\) oscillation/annihilation. Additionally we also evaluate the decay rate of glueball to light mesons \(\rho \) and \(\pi \) in Appendix C as a comparison by using the parameters given in Sect. 5.1.
5.1 The mode eigenfunctions and the choice of parameters
Let outline the parameters and formulas to investigate the decay/production of glueball in this section. For the vector HL-meson fields, the eigenfunctions \(\left\{ \phi _{m}\right\} \) (3.21) have to satisfy the normalization condition (3.21) which is exactly the same as the normalization of \(\left\{ \psi _{n}\right\} \) for \(n\ge 1\) presented in [12],
From these, the functions \(\left\{ \psi _{n}\right\} \) for \(n\ge 1\) could be generated by the following eigen equation,
Thus it is seen that we can choose \(\phi _{n}=\frac{\psi _{n}}{\sqrt{2}}\) for all \(n\ge 1\). For the scalar HL-meson field, we can choose \(\phi _{n}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}v_{V}^{-1}U_{KK}^{-1}K\left( Z\right) ^{-1/4}\psi _{n}\) according to (3.23). Note that there still exists a function \({\tilde{\phi }}_{0}\) orthogonal to \(\left\{ {\tilde{\phi }}_{n}\right\} \) for all \(n\ge 1\) which is approximately given as,
while \(\psi _{0}\) does not satisfy the eigen equation (5.2). So the complete set of eigenfunctions \(\left\{ \phi _{m}\right\} \) can be obtained by re-defining \(\phi _{m}=\frac{\psi _{m+1}}{\sqrt{2}}\) for all \(m\ge 0\) thus \(\Lambda _{0}=1,\Lambda _{m}=\lambda _{m},m>0\). Hence we are going to continue the discussion with this definition.
In order to match the experimental value of the \(\rho \) meson mass \(m_{\rho }=\sqrt{\lambda _{1}}M_{KK}\simeq 776\mathrm {MeV}\) where \(\lambda _{1}\) is numerically evaluated as \(\lambda _{1}=0.669314...\), we first need to fix the Kaluza–Klein mass to \(M_{KK}=949\mathrm {MeV}\). Then let us identify the lowest mode of the heavy-light meson field \(Q_{\mu ,n=0},Q_{n=0}\) as the vector meson \(D_{\mu }^{0}\) and the pseudoscalar meson \(D^{0}\) whose mass is given as \(M\left( D_{\mu }^{0}\right) \simeq 2007\mathrm {MeV},\ M\left( D^{0}\right) \simeq 1865\mathrm {MeV}\) by experiments. In this sense, we further consider the case of \(N_{f}=2\) for D-meson, so the parameters in (3.20), (3.25) can be numerically fixed as
On the other hand, the glueball mass in holography is determined by solving the eigen equations (2.11), (2.16) for exotic, dilatonic and tensor glueball respectively. For the reader’s convenience, we collect the mass spectrum of various glueballs in Table 2. It is clear that the glueball decay occurs when the mass relation \(m_{\mathrm {glueball}}/m_{\mathrm {D-meson}}\simeq 2\) is satisfied because the effective holographic action we discussed is quadratic of the heavy-light meson fields. Accordingly we will choose the excited mass of \(n=3\) as \(M_{E}=\sqrt{154.963/9}M_{KK}\simeq 3938\mathrm {MeV},\ M_{D}=M_{T}=\sqrt{162.699/9}M_{KK}\simeq 4035\mathrm {MeV}\) for the exotic, dilatonic and tensor glueball respectively. With these values for the parameters, the boundary condition for the eigen equations (2.11), (2.16) is numerically evaluated as,
Beside, the formula of the decay width is given as,
where \({\mathcal {M}}\) refers to the associated amplitude and
is the volume element of the n-body phase space. And we will use the parameters above with (5.6) to study the decay of one glueball into the lowest D-mesons.
5.2 Glueball decay into the lowest scalar \(D^{0}{\bar{D}}^{0}\) meson
In this section, let us compute the decay/production width of the glueball to two lowest heavy-light mesons i.e. the (pseudo) scalar mesons (\(D^{0}{\bar{D}}^{0}\)). The expression of the width (5.6) for the scalar glueball into \(D^{0}{\bar{D}}^{0}\) could be simplified as,Footnote 10
where \(\left| \varvec{\mathrm {p}}\right| =\sqrt{\left( \frac{M_{E,D}}{2}\right) ^{2}-M_{D^{0}}^{2}}\) represents the 3-momentum of one \(D^{0}\) in the rest frame of the glueball. For the tensor glueball we however need the average over its polarizations. Hence let us integrate over the orientation of the coordinates by choosing a fixed polarization \(\epsilon ^{11}=-\epsilon ^{22}=1\). So it leads to the decay width as.
Note that (\(D^{0}{\bar{D}}^{0}\)) will be denoted as (\(D{\bar{D}}\)) for simplicity in the following discussion.
5.2.1 Exotic scalar glueball
The relevant part of the action involving the exotic glueball and \(D^{0}{\bar{D}}^{0}\) can be collected from (4.5) to (4.19) which is,
where the coupling constants could be numerically evaluated as,
By omitting the terms which vanishes when \(G_{E}\) is onshell in (5.10), the amplitude is calculated as,
and the decay/production rate is accordingly obtained as,
5.2.2 Dilatonic scalar glueball
For the decay of the dilatonic glueball, we have the same formula for the action collected from (4.5) to (4.19),
where the coupling constants are numerically evaluated as,
Omitting the terms when \(G_{D}\) is onshell in (5.10), the amplitude is calculated as,
which leads to the decay/production rate as,
5.2.3 Tensor glueball
The action involving the tensor glueball and \(D{\bar{D}}\) is very simple,
where the coupling constant is,
Then we could obtain the amplitude when \(T_{\mu \nu }\) is onshell as,
therefore the decay/production rate is evaluated as,
6 Summary and discussion
By using the Witten–Sakai–Sugimoto model, we study the interaction of glueball and heavy-light flavoured mesons in holography then extend the calculations of glueball decay/production in [25, 26] with heavy flavour. The model contains only one free dimensional parameter \(M_{KK}\) since it is a top-down approach of string theory. The glueball fields are identified as the various fluctuations of the bulk geometry produced by the \(N_{c}\) compactified D4-branes and the meson fields are created by the open strings living in the \(N_{f}\) probe \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes. Particularly we construct the D4/D8 configuration as in [28, 29, 37, 38] by introducing an extra pair of probe \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes as “heavy flavour” which is separated from the other \(N_{f}\) \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes with a heavy-light string stretched between them. In this configuration the multiplets produced by the heavy-light string could be identified as the heavy-light flavoured mesons so that the model is able to include their interactions with glueball.
Motivated by the heavy-flavoured hadron-anti hadron oscillation [32, 33], we numerically evaluate the three-hadron coupling constants between the various glueballs (the exotic, dilatonic scalar and tensor glueballs) and the lowest heavy-light flavoured mesons (\(D^{0}\) meson) then compute the associated decay widths/rates (the production of \(D^{0}{\bar{D}}^{0}\)) in this model. As an effective theory, the production of \(D^{0}{\bar{D}}^{0}\) would be remarkable to study the \(D^{0}-{\bar{D}}^{0}\) oscillation [32] in holography. And we find the decay/production widths of glueballs are parametrically suppressed by the factor \(\lambda ^{-1}N_{c}^{-2}\) in the large \(N_{c}\) limit while the results vary substantially for the different decay channels. So it could not give the picture of “universal narrowness” although the heavy flavour and large \(N_{c}\) limitation are considered in the model. However on the other hand, the decay/production widths of the lightest glueball to the lowest light mesons in this model turn out to be consistent with the experimental data of the \(f_{0}\left( 1500\right) \) decay [25, 26], thus our calculation with heavy flavour could be a further prediction of glueball-meson interaction although the experimental evidence are currently insufficient.Footnote 11 Besides, the decay/production rate of the exotic scalar glueball is turned out to have a larger width than that of the heavier dilatonic mode according to our calculation, so our results support partially the conjecture proposed in [26] that is the lowest glueball model begins with the dilatonic mode and the exotic scalar glueball should be discarded.
Noteworthily phenomenological models usually require very large gluon condensates in order to admit only narrow glueball states while the value of the gluon condensate is quite small in the WSS model. Nevertheless it could be interesting to introduce the gluon condensates into a top-down approach of holography as [43,44,45] so that it would be able to compare with the phenomenological models.
We finally comments that the mixing of glueballs with \(q{\bar{q}}\) meson states would be also interesting to study since the signatures of glueball content can be strongly obscured by the mixing. But it might probably require more difficult stringy corrections which are not captured by the effective action following from the WSS model in holography. Nonetheless this would be more pivotal to identify the glueball in the future study.
Data Availability Statement
This manuscript has no associated data or the data will not be deposited. [Authors’ comment: This is a totally theoretical work, so the calculation and analysis are all based on the current knowledge about physics theory. Thus there is not any data in this work.]
Notes
The equations of motion for the bulk fields can also been found in the Appendix A.
We use “\(p-q\) string” and “\(p-{\bar{q}}\) string” to denote the open string with one end attached to the \(\mathrm {D}p\)-brane and the other end to the \(\mathrm {D}q\)-brane and \(\overline{\mathrm {D}q}\)-brane respectively. For example, “\(4-{\bar{8}}\) string” refers to the open string with one end attached to the \(\mathrm {D}4\)-brane and the other end to the \(\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-brane.
For \(N_{f}\) D8-branes, all the actions in (3.3) should include a pre-factor \(N_{f}\). Nonetheless we do not pick it up because a pre-factor does not affect any results.
In this notation, the gauge field \(A_{M}\) is anti-Hermitian which means \(A_{M}^{\dagger }=-A_{M}\) and \(F_{MN}^{\dagger }=-F_{MN}\).
In (3.4) there is a residual gauge symmetry in the action. So it would be convenient to choose a gauge which keeps \(A_{Z}\) nonzero for our purposes. The frequently chosen gauge which keeps \(A_{Z}=0\) leads to a different parametrization of the Goldstone bosons in this model but physically equivalent situation.
The dynamics of \(\varphi ^{\left( 1\right) }\) is absorbed by the \(\rho \) meson through a gauge transformation \(B_{\mu }^{\left( 1\right) }\rightarrow B_{\mu }^{\left( 1\right) }+m_{n}^{-1}\partial _{\mu }\varphi ^{\left( 1\right) }\).
We assume that \(\Phi \) is expanded with a pre-factor \(U_{KK}\) so that the base functions are all dimensionless.
We will use \(G_{E,D},T\) to denote the interaction involving the exotic, dilatonic scalar glueball and tensor glueball respectively. The action for the interaction of glueball and \(\pi ,\rho \) meson in this model is collected in Appendix C.
We have employed the same convention as those in [26].
The \(X\left( 3020\right) \) [42] is the only one glueball candidate whose energy is close to the glueballs’ discussed in our manuscript.
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Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Anton Rebhan, Josef Leutgeb and Kazem Bitaghsir for valuable comment and discussion. This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under Grant No. 11947008, the research startup foundation of Dalian Maritime University in 2019 under Grant No. 02502608 and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities under Grant No. 3132020174, also supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under Grant No. 11535012.
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Appendices
Appendix A: The 10d equations of motion in the bulk supergravity
The WSS model is obtained by the Kaluza-Klein reduction of the 11d supergravity on a cycle. Since the supersymmetry is broken down in the model, the bulk geometry of \(N_{c}\) D4-branes in the large \(N_{c}\) limit is determined by the bosonic part of the type IIA supergravity whose action is given as,
where \(2k_{10}^{2}=16G_{10}/g_{s}^{2}=\left( 2\pi \right) ^{7}l_{s}^{8}\) , \(G_{10}\) is 10d Newton constant and \(F_{4}=dC_{3}\) is the field strength of the Ramond-Ramond (R-R) 3-form \(C_{3}\) with,
The equations of motion could be obtained by varying the action (A.1) with respect to the metric \(g_{MN}\), the dilaton field \(\Phi \) and the R-R form \(C_{3}\) which are,
Note that the solution given in (2.7) exactly satisfies the above equations of motion. The Ramond-Ramond strength \(F_{4}\) needs to be supported by \(N_{c}\) units of flux on \(S^{4}\) which satisfies,
The factor \(N_{c}\) arises because in the WSS model we consider a stack of \(N_{c}\) D4-branes.
Appendix B: The action of the D-brane with non-Abelian excitation
The action of D-branes with non-Abelian excitations describes the dynamics of coincident N Dp-branes. It could be obtained by T-duality which is the standard technique in string theory. Let us consider a stack of Dp-branes in D dimensional spacetime parametrized by \(\left\{ X^{\mu }\right\} ,\mu =0,1\ldots D-1\). Then we use the indices \(a,b=0,1\ldots p\) and \(i,j,k=p+1\ldots D-1\) to denote respectively the directions parallel and vertical to the Dp-branes in the spacetime. The complete bosonic action of such Dp-branes is therefore collected as,
where
Here \(g_{\mu \nu },B_{\mu \nu }\) is the metric of the D dimensional spacetime and the 2-form field respectively. The “STr” refers to the “symmetric trace” and F is the non-Abelian gauge field strength defined as \(F_{ab}=\partial _{[a}A_{b]}+A_{[a}A_{b]}\). The transverse modes of the Dp-branes are denoted as \(\varphi ^{i}\) ’s which are in fact the “T-dualitized” coordinates given by \(2\pi \alpha ^{\prime }\varphi ^{i}=X^{i}\). Note that we have chosen the “static gauge” throughout the manuscript in order to gauge away the 2-form field B i.e. \(B_{\mu \nu }=0\) and defined \(\varphi ^{i=9}\equiv \Psi \) in (3.14) since there is only one transverse coordinate for the case of \(\mathrm {D}8/\overline{\mathrm {D}8}\)-branes.
By keeping these in mind, the DBI action in (B.2) could be expanded as,
Note the gauge field \(A_{a}\) and scalar field \(\varphi ^{i}\) ’s are all in the adjoint representation of \(U\left( N\right) \).
As a D-brane is usually supersymmetric, there may be superpartner terms to the actions given in (B.2). Nonetheless we do not attempt to give the explicit action of those fermionic superpartners since they are irrelevant to the calculations in this manuscript. However in the WSS model, one might find it remains to have supersymmetry on the \(N_{f}\) flavour branes below the scale of \(M_{KK}\) although the \(N_{c}\) D4-branes are compactified (non-supersymmetric) [46]. Accordingly it forces us to include the superpartners of the mesons on the flavour branes. This becomes indeed a theoretical issue of this model because the meson spectrum containing superpartners would be unrealistic. In order to figure out this problem in this model, we are motivated by the mechanisms in the compactification of the \(N_{c}\) D4-branes and the processes are as follows. First let us compact the time direction in 10d solution (2.7) on a circle with the period/mass scale \(\delta t\sim M_{T}^{-1}\gg 1\). Then we require the boundary conditions of the bosonic and the supersymmetrically fermionic fields on D8-brane are periodic and anti-periodic respectively. So the supersymmetric fermions become massive thus decoupled below the scale \(M_{T}\). Since the mass scale \(M_{T}\) corresponds to the temperature in the dual field theory, it means there is not any superpartners of the mesons below the (very low) temperature \(T=M_{T}\ll 1\). Hence the meson spectrum close to zero temperature is non-supersymmetric unless we take the limitation of \(\delta t\rightarrow \infty \) i.e. the case of zero-temperature. This scheme provides a non-suppersymmetric meson spectrum at very low but finite temperature and it would be reasonable since zero-temperature case in realistic physics is out of reach thus it could be supersymmetric.
Appendix C: The interactions of glueball and \(\pi ,\rho \) mesons
1.1 C1: The exotic scalar glueball
Let identify the lowest modes in (3.6) as vector \(\rho \) meson and scalar \(\pi \) meson in the sector of the light flavor, then substitute (4.3), (4.4) into the Yang-Mills action in (3.3) and perform the integration over Z, it leads to the following 4d effective action for the interaction of \(\pi ,\rho \) meson and the exotic scalar glueball,
where the coefficients \(c_{i}\)’s and \({\tilde{c}}_{i}\)’s are,
1.2 C2: The dilatonic and tensor glueball
The action for the interaction of dilatonic glueball and \(\pi ,\rho \) mesons could be obtained by plugging the (2.14) into action (3.3) then performing the integration over Z. We collect the resultantly quadratic terms in \(\pi ,\rho \) as,
where the coefficients are,
And similarly, the interaction action of tensor glueball and \(\pi ,\rho \) mesons is given as,
with the coefficients \(t_{i}=\sqrt{6}d_{i}\).
Appendix D: The renormalization of the quadric D8-brane action
In the holographic approach, the full action of the D-brane usually contains a counterterm [40]. While the holographic counterterm for the probe D8-brane in this model is less clear, it can be constructed by analyzing its asymptotics and computed as [17, 21, 41] (\(\epsilon \rightarrow 0\)),
where
And \(\chi _{1,2}\) are two parameters, h is the determinant of the metric at the UV boundary, K is the trace of the boundary extrinsic curvature whose explicit form is
If \(\chi _{1}=\frac{16}{7},\chi _{2}=\frac{1}{2}\), this counterterm exactly cancels the divergence in the DBI action of the probe D8-branes,
So taking into account the quadric action of the probe brane, the counterterm including the transverse modes can be further constructed by using (D.1) or equivalently (D.4) which leads to an additional counterterm to (3.14) as
Following the discussion from (3.15) to (3.16), this term can be written as
where
Hence the potential infinities in \(M_{V}\) and \(M_{S}\) would depend on the behaviors of the basis functions \(\left\{ \phi _{m},{\tilde{\phi }}_{m}\right\} \) at large Z and can be removed by (D.6). Then the renormalized mass (3.21), (3.25) should be given as
As an effective theory of meson, the mass term presented in (3.20) should be interpreted as the renormalized mass. And it implies this setup is valid below the heavy-flavoured energy scale. Finally since the basis function may not be analytical, let us numerically evaluate \(S_{c.t}^{\Psi }\) for the lowest scalar and vector modes presented in this manuscript (in Z coordinate),
Then using (D.8) it gives a finite numerical result
According to the expirenmental data about the D-meson , fitting \(M_{S}\simeq 1754\mathrm {MeV},M_{V}\simeq 2007\mathrm {MeV}\), it leads to (5.4) for the numerical calculation in this paper.
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Li, Sw. The interaction of glueball and heavy-light flavoured meson in holographic QCD. Eur. Phys. J. C 80, 881 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-08458-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-08458-x