Abstract
We investigate the light-quarkonium spectrum using a covariant Dyson–Schwinger–Bethe–Salpeter-equation approach to QCD. We discuss splittings among as well as orbital angular momentum properties of various states in detail and analyze common features of mass splittings with regard to properties of the effective interaction. In particular, we predict the mass of \(\bar{s}s\) exotic \(1^{-+}\) states, and identify orbital angular momentum content in the excitations of the \(\rho \) meson. Comparing our covariant model results, the \(\rho \) and its second excitation being predominantly S-wave, the first excitation being predominantly D-wave, to corresponding conflicting lattice-QCD studies, we investigate the pion-mass dependence of the orbital-angular-momentum assignment and find a crossing at a scale of \(m_\pi \sim 1.4\) GeV. If this crossing turns out to be a feature of the spectrum generated by lattice-QCD studies as well, it may reconcile the different results, since they have been obtained at different values of \(m_\pi \).
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1 Introduction
Over recent years the covariant Dyson–Schwinger–Bethe–Salpeter-equation (DSBSE) approach to QCD [1,2,3,4] has matured via numerous individual studies of meson and baryon states and related phenomena. To trace and sketch the relevant literature, one may consult work on pseudoscalar, vector [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17], and other mesons [18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25], baryon masses [26,27,28,29,30,31] leptonic, electromagnetic, and hadronic interactions of both mesons [32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51] and baryons [52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64], as well as further states [65,66,67,68].
Many technical and numerical refinements and developments [69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82] have made it possible and desirable to attempt an as-comprehensive-as-possible application of these techniques to hadron phenomenology. For the sake of feasibility, first steps were taken in a rainbow-ladder (RL) truncated setup of the DSBSE framework using a suitable effective interaction model.
Anchoring for an effective RL investigation needs to be provided in the heavy-quark domain, first approached in this context in [83] for bottomonium ground states and extended in our recent studies of heavy quarkonia [84, 85], and exotic \(J^{PC}=1^{-+}\) states [86]. At the same time, additional model-independent anchoring happens in and towards the chiral limit via the satisfaction of the axial-vector Ward–Takahashi identity [87,88,89,90,91]. For the case of dynamical chiral symmetry breaking, this guarantees a massless pion ground state and vanishing leptonic decay constants for all radial pion excitations in the chiral limit as well as the validity of a generalized Gell-Mann–Oakes–Renner relation for any pseudoscalar meson and quark mass [5,6,7].
Satisfaction of the axial-vector and other Ward–Takahashi identities is one of the strengths of the RL-truncated setup in the DSBSE approach. On the other hand, these identities can be used to find appropriate constructions of the quark–gluon vertex (QGV) and corresponding truncations of the DSBSE system. In any truncation, the use of an effective quark–gluon interaction remains, but this interaction will necessarily be different at different levels of truncation.
Note that setting a particular dressing function to a constant or zero, i. e., the corresponding n-point function is at least partly approximated or neglected, constitutes an effective model. The actual dressing function that would be obtained by a more complete solution of the set of DSEs may in fact be negligible but, strictly speaking, non-zero. In addition, the use of Ansätze may be several steps away from the QGV and its dressing functions in a more complicated truncation and thus the effective nature of the resulting quark–gluon interaction somewhat hidden, e. g., [92]. In such a case, the effects of the truncation are expected to be smaller regarding the effective interaction as compared to the one which would be found in an untruncated study.
The QGV [93] can easily be made more complicated in simple interaction models [94,95,96,97,98,99,100,101,102]. Also, beyond-RL calculations with more sophisticated kinds of an effective interaction are available [103,104,105,106], albeit in their current implementation too tedious for large-scale computations. In addition, one needs to gain understanding in more basic truncations first before advancing to more complicated ones; e.g., technical details and problems are much more easily worked out this way.
Furthermore still, the importance of resonant corrections cannot be stressed enough. We remark at this point that our calculations provide bound-state solutions from the BSE; hadronic (and other) decay widths can be obtained via consistent constructions corresponding to the decay mechanism involving bound-state amplitudes of the participating states [39, 57].
For the present purpose of a comprehensive investigation, we continue along the lines of our fitting strategy first described in [84], where we employed it to find an optimal RL-based description of heavy quarkonia. In the application to light mesons it turned out that an overall satisfactory description of light isovector-meson spectra seems not possible with our particular model setup and parametrization of our effective one-dressed-gluon interaction.
In turn, for the study of exotic mesons in [86] we investigated several sets of splittings among light-meson masses and were able to find some with a reasonable correlation to exotic spectra in order to warrant using them to obtain predictions for exotic heavy quarkonia. Among others and as a complement of our previous work, we revisit this problem here in Appendix B. We sketch the essentials of the setup and strategy in Sects. 2 and 3. We have also systematically investigated pion-related, radial, orbital, and other meson-mass splittings, whose detailed results are collected in Appendix C–Appendix F. A combined fit is presented in Sect. 3.5, followed by a discussion of orbital angular momentum of various mesons in Sect. 4. Conclusions and an outlook are presented in Sect. 5.
Our calculations are performed in Euclidean-space Landau-gauge QCD. For the interested reader we refer to analogous calculations in Coulomb-gauge QCD [107,108,109,110] or Minkowski space [111,112,113,114,115,116,117,118,119].
2 Setup and model
We use the homogeneous \(q\bar{q}\) BSE in RL truncation which reads
where q and P are the quark–antiquark relative and total momenta, respectively, and the (anti)quark momenta are chosen as \(q_{\pm } = q\pm P/2\). The renormalized dressed quark propagator S(p) is obtained from its DSE,
\(\varSigma \) is the quark self-energy, \(m_q\) is the current-quark mass given at the renormalization scale \(\mu \), and \(Z_2\) and \(Z_4\) are renormalization constants [5]. \(D_{\mu \nu }^\mathrm {f}\) represents the free gluon propagator and \(\gamma _\nu \) is the Dirac structure of the bare and RL-truncated quark–gluon vertex. Dirac and flavor indices are omitted for brevity. \(\int ^\varLambda _q=\int ^\varLambda d^4q/(2\pi )^4\) denotes a translationally invariant regularization of the integral, with the regularization scale \(\varLambda \) [5].
The effective interaction \(\mathscr {G}\) needs to be specified in order to obtain numerical results. Our choice is the well-investigated and phenomenologically successful form of Ref. [8], which reads
The parameter \(\omega \) [GeV] corresponds to an effective inverse range of the interaction, while D [\(\hbox {GeV}^2\)] acts like an overall strength of the first term; they determine the intermediate-momentum part of the interaction, while the second term is relevant for large momenta and produces the correct one-loop perturbative QCD limit. We note that
where \(m_\mathrm {t}=0.5\) GeV, \(\tau =\mathrm{e}^2-1\), \(N_\mathrm {f}=4\), \(\varLambda _\mathrm {QCD}^{N_\mathrm {f}=4}= 0.234\,\mathrm{GeV}\), and \(\gamma _\mathrm {m}=12/(33-2N_\mathrm {f})\), which is unchanged from Ref. [8].
3 Spectroscopy
3.1 RL truncation: context and corrections
Based on beyond RL studies of light mesons and the amount and kind of corrections observed there, one could argue that a fitting attempt such as ours is futile in terms of a reasonable description of the spectrum. In particular, one could expect or even demand that an RL-truncated analysis overestimates, e. g., the mass of the \(\rho \) meson, since both resonant and non-resonant corrections should bring its value down to the experimental number [11]. Then the RL results would serve as a “core” for dressings and corrections to be added to arrive at an overall satisfactory description of the spectrum.
However, our goal is to use RL truncation with an appropriate sophisticated model effective interaction to obtain a comprehensive and reasonable description of meson spectra, very much akin to a constituent-quark model. Still, one can remark that in such a comprehensive fit attempt, due to the expected corrections beyond RL truncation, the resulting effective scale will be overestimated.
This is a valid concern; indeed, such a tendency exists. However, one must keep two important observations in mind: First of all, RL truncation does actually work well enough in the heavy-quark domain, in particular for the same set of states considered herein, a fact very often ignored in light-meson-based arguments. This was shown in our recent work [83, 85] and provides ample motivation for our light-quark study, in particular considering that not all means of generalizing the functional form of the effective interaction have been exhausted yet.
Secondly, studies beyond RL truncation, out of computational necessity, only use very few combinations of model parameters and are by no means exhaustive. Unfortunately, the same is true for many RL studies, which claim failure of the truncation on the basis of a very limited data set. Exhaustive studies in RL are necessary to make strong claims in this regard.
Thus, based on the heavy-quarkonium success, it is certainly legitimate to test the same strategy that was used there also in the light-quarkonium case and determine its ability and limits, even at the risk or expense of overestimating or, more generally speaking, somewhat misrepresenting the spectrum. Apparent model deficiencies can and should primarily be interpreted as the need to investigate more complicated Ansaetze, which is a definite and interesting task for further study.
3.2 Effects of model parameters
In a model setup such as ours the use of different parameter sets can lead to similar results. A prime example is the original work of Maris and Tandy [8] where a reasonable fit of \(\pi \) and \(\rho \) properties was obtained for three \((\omega ,D)\) pairs, which are – omitting units for simplicity – (0.3, 1.24), (0.4, 0.93), (0.5, 0.744). When simplified to a one-parameter model via the prescription \(D=\mathrm {const.}/\omega \) (the standard Maris–Tandy value of the constant is \(0.372~\hbox {GeV}^3\)), one finds that ground-state masses and decay constants are independent of the value of \(\omega \) on the domain \(\omega \in [0.3,0.5]\) GeV, whereas any excitations (radial or orbital) and their properties depend rather strongly on such a choice of \(\omega \), a picture equally valid for both mesons and baryons [11, 20, 21, 27, 29,30,31, 41, 55, 57, 60, 72, 120,121,122,123,124,125]. This is not surprising, since its value in the parametrization of Eq. (3) defines a scale at which the long-range part of the effective interaction is strongest – a characteristic expected to be relevant in excitations rather than ground states.
Strategies to arrive at results independent of the model-parameter values for excited states can then rely on ratios of calculated masses for selected pairs with a strongly correlated \(\omega \) dependence in order to predict isolated quantities; see, e. g., Refs. [19, 126]. For a more comprehensive approach, however, it is important to have a systematic broad basis of parameter sets to investigate.
3.3 Fitting strategy
We work on a grid of \(\omega \in \{0.4,0.5,0.6,0,7,0.8\}\) GeV \(\times \) \(D \in \{0.9,1.1,1.2,1.3,1.4,1.5,1.7\}~\hbox {GeV}^2\). Figure 1 illustrates the form of the effective coupling defined in Eq. (3) for all combinations of \(\omega \) and D used herein. The axes are D, used to group curves with the same D value, but different \(\omega \) values (this is shown in the left panel of Fig. 1); and \(\sqrt{s}=\sqrt{q^2}\) to show the s dependence of \(\mathscr {G}\), but at the same time highlight the peak of the curve and label it by the corresponding value of \(\omega \) (this can be seen best in the right panel of Fig. 1). Obviously, the peak height of each curve rises with increasing D for constant \(\omega \). Also, for equal D, the lowest \(\omega =0.4\) GeV produces the largest peak, while the largest of our \(\omega =0.8\) GeV yields the lowest peak.
Our quark-mass value of \(m_{u/d}=0.003\) GeV (given at a renormalization point \(\mu =19\) GeV) is fixed such that the experimental value for the pion mass is reproduced, which is universally the case for this current-quark-mass value on our \(\omega \)–D grid, and we consider the case of isovector mesons in the isospin-symmetric limit.
In our fitting strategy the general idea is to evaluate \(\chi ^2\) from the comparison of the experimental splitting(s) \((\varDelta _e)_i\) under consideration to our calculated values \((\varDelta _c)_i\) across the \(\omega \)–D grid by computing the residuals \(r_i=(\varDelta _e-\varDelta _c)_i \) for every splitting i in the chosen set and sum their squares. Normalizing the sum via the number n of splittings considered then yields \(\chi ^2=1/n \sum _{i=1}^n r_i^2\) at every \((\omega ,D)\). We then analyze and identify trends and regions of better or worse agreement with experiment. In a successful global fitting attempt, we would then find overlapping regions of good agreement with experimental splittings for all relevant cases, such that an overall satisfactory description of the isovector-meson masses results.
Each figure of this kind herein is plotted from the same viewing angle onto the \(\omega \)–D grid, unless the resulting \(\chi ^2\) surface cannot be seen properly or one of its essential features is hidden. For the cases where our calculations did not produce a numerically convincing result, “empty grid points” may appear in the plot. This is the result of some of the numerical techniques used in order to arrive at our computed results; details of the numerical setup and difficulties as well as solution strategies can be found in [72, 75,76,77, 85, 86]. Error bars corresponding to our numerical uncertainties for our results are generated by our calculations automatically. However, for the sake of clarity they are not given in the fitting plots but only where results for a particular set of computed results are plotted versus the data, such as Figs. 3 or 5. Note also that regions of equally low \(\chi ^2\) in the plots do not indicate a correlation of the model parameters \(\omega \) and D, since there is no universal pattern across the various plots herein. We treat these two parameters as completely uncorrelated.
A prominent example for a meson-mass splitting is the hyperfine splitting between the \(0^{-+}\) and \(1^{--}\) ground states. Our comparison is shown in Fig. 2. To properly and clearly identify splittings we introduce the following notation: A splitting is denoted by the quantum numbers \(J^{PC}\) together with a subscript n for the radial excitation with \(n=0\) denoting the ground state, \(n=1\) the first radial excitation, etc. For the example of the hyperfine splitting, we thus write \([1^{--}_0-0^{-+}_0]\). For a set of splittings fitted simultaneously we denote them together in parentheses.
It appears that in order to provide a good fit for the hyperfine splitting in the isovector case one would need to investigate values towards the “traditional” values for \(\omega \) and D from the original work of Maris and Tandy: the general trend is that the splitting is better reproduced for lower values of both \(\omega \) and D.
However, while the hyperfine splitting is iconic, there are many others to consider and the entire picture is rather complicated. Thus, we detail several groups of splittings and their effects separately in the appendix and discuss only the overall result and its comparison to experimental data here for two particular strategic cases.
The detailed analyses found in the appendices concern, in particular: a basic set of splittings used to arrive at possible conclusions about light exotic-vector states in Appendix B, thus complementing the discussion published in [86]; a set of splittings of various meson masses to the pion mass in Appendix C, which is of paramount importance in an attempt at overall fitting success; a set of radial splittings in various quantum-number channels in Appendix D; a set of splittings resulting from orbital excitations of different states in Appendix E; and a set of various other relevant splittings in Appendix F, which do not fit in any of the previous categories.
Turning back to the discussion of fitting strategies, we have chosen the first example of exotic mesons, along the lines of our previous work, in order to highlight the choice of splittings for a good description of this particular aspect of the light-quarkonium spectrum before moving to the overall description. As detailed in Appendix B, it turned out that the combination \(([1^{++}_0-1^{+-}_0],[1^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0],[1^{+-}_0-0^{-+}_0])\) yields a good description of the \(\pi _1\) masses without actually fitting to those, which provides predictive power at higher quark masses, where \(1^{-+}\) states have not yet been observed experimentally. The apparent mass gap between the ground state and the first candidate for a hybrid herein is consistent with lattice-QCD studies, where one obtains roughly 1.6 GeV [128,129,130].
This strategy was applied to both isovector quarkonia and strangeonium, where for the latter we used the slightly different set \(([1^{++}_0-1^{+-}_0],[1^{++}_0-1^{--}_0],[1^{+-}_0-1^{--}_0])\) for fitting. This was necessary to compensate for the absence of a pseudoscalar ground-state quarkonium without hidden strangeness. The corresponding results are shown compared to experimental data in the left and right panels of Fig. 3, respectively. It is remarkable that not only \(\pi _1\) states are represented well by this particular choice of fitted splittings, but also the overall appearance of the spectra is reasonable in both cases.
3.4 Technical remarks
Before we move on to the more comprehensive fitting strategy, a few more remarks are in order. For example, it is interesting to note that nothing prohibits us from studying light isoscalars comprehensively as well, but this case is a lot more complicated due to flavor mixing with the \(s\bar{s}\) case. While we could attempt such a comprehensive study of the isoscalar light sector and extend our study along these lines, the main difficulty would be a consistent setup of flavor mixing, which happens on the meson level on the basis of the computed \(n\bar{n}\) and \(s\bar{s}\) states, since RL truncation does not contain flavor mixing in the BSE kernel. Indeed, the challenge of finding a reasonable scheme for mixing our \(n\bar{n}\) and \(s\bar{s}\) states in all \(J^{PC}\) channels under consideration would make for a pointless exercise in the light of the otherwise simple setup of our approach in the present study. In particular, adding several additional parameters by introducing various mixing angles would lead away from the simple message of this article and not accomplish much in terms of predictive power. Note also that it is conceivable to work with energy-dependent mixing angles, which would result in even more arbitrariness for the discussion of excited states [131]. As a result, herein we restrict our discussion and predictions strictly to the case of ideal flavor mixing, which corresponds to the natural flavor content of mesons in the RL-truncated DSBSE approach.
Another somewhat technical remark concerns so-called spurious solutions found early on in the BSE treatment of the Wick–Cutcosky model [132, 133]. There, such states can be identified uniquely and clearly by an analysis of the states’ dependence on the coupling strength [134, 135]. In the coupled DSBSE approach, however, the situation is not as clear, since both quark propagators are dressed and not free-particle propagators like for a Wick–Cutcosky setup, and there is no clean way to turn the coupling strength down to zero without destroying essential features of the model like dynamical chiral symmetry breaking.
Signals for spurious states could be some either technically or phenomenologically suspicious or abnormal behavior of the dependence of the results on parameters like \(\omega \), D, or the quark masses, which we do not encounter in our investigation. Even more technically, one may observe other instabilities in the meson-mass solutions as they are obtained from the homogeneous BSE.
This is part of a more general picture. It is clear that in any numerical nonperturbative approach to QCD the consistent numerical extraction of information on excited states can be expected to be harder than for ground states. This is true, e. g., for lattice QCD and also here, since the solutions of the homogeneous BSE require dealing with eigenvalues of a large matrix as a function of the meson momentum squared [75]. As already mentioned in the introduction, numerical methods to study hadron excitations in the DSBSE approach have been improved a lot over the past years.
Still, restrictions certainly exist a priori by choosing a truncation, and subsequently a particular effective interaction or whatever other dressing functions remain to be chosen within a given truncation.
Concretely, in our truncation and model, this implies a few limitations of a more general, but still technical nature such that we would not regard information as regards excitations higher than the ones presented here very reliable. Due to the expected effects of mainly resonant corrections to RL truncation we restrict our arguments to states up to the second excitation in the \(1^{--}\) channel and to states up to the first excitation otherwise. The exotic quantum numbers can be viewed and calculated as separate channels and therefore the lowest-lying state in any exotic \(J^{PC}\) channel is obtained as a ground state.
The role of spurious states should and will be investigated as the need arises, in future studies of higher excitations than the ones considered here. For the low-lying states at the heart of the discussion herein, we are confident that our results do not contain spurious solutions of the BSE.
Finally, a short discussion of the basic philosophy regarding our comparison to experimental data is in order: To make things simple and straight-forward, we assume the point of view that each light isovector-meson state as given by the PDG [127] corresponds to a bound state in our calculations. While this is straight-forward indeed, it may be oversimplified, since there is the possibility that \(q\bar{q}\) states such as used herein are only the basis for the actual content of mesonic states seen in experiment. This is also one reason for us not to continue our study to, e. g., the isoscalar case, since there many possible admixtures such as glueballs or molecules would have to be taken into account. We also neglect effects of hadronic or other decay mechanisms at this point, since inclusion of any of the effects mentioned here would be beyond the scope of the present study.
In summary, our results must be taken with a grain of salt and seen as some sort of \(q\bar{q}\)-core states in a simple matching attempt to the experimental light-meson data set. At the same time, we stress that more informed and detailed comparisons based on matching principles which take into account both non-resonant as well as resonant corrections are immediate next steps in a comprehensive study such as the one presented here. In particular, the covariant and well-constrained DSBSE formalism provides an ideal candidate for providing reliable \(q\bar{q}\) core states in such an improved future study.
It is also important to note at this point that not all radial excitations used here are well-established experimentally like, e. g., the \(a_1(1640)\) in the \(1^{++}\) channel or those for higher meson spin J. Nonetheless, we plot our basic overview using the values provided by the PDG [127].
3.5 Combined fits and results
With the goal of a comprehensive and satisfactory description of the light-quarkonium spectrum in mind, one could easily base a fitting strategy and analysis on a large set of splittings, including all possible kinds and combinations of meson masses. However, not every splitting can be considered equally important or significant. We have investigated a large number of splittings, and the results are detailed in the appendix. For each group or kind of splittings we started with a large set only limited by the arguments given above, and attempted an as satisfactory as possible description of the data. However, this turned out to be difficult in general. In particular, it turned out that the attempt to tune the model parameters to certain splittings can easily destroy a good overall description of the data. For a more serious and concrete attempt at a good phenomenological description of the meson spectrum with our present setup we thus selected a number of reliable and important splittings in a first step of reduction. In a second such step, only very few splittings were retained to concentrate on a rather small set of fitted splittings and investigate the results.
These three groups are used in each appendix for the different kinds of splittings and their respective combinations are also shown here for the overall fitting attempt and result in Fig. 4: all splittings combined are shown in the left panel, the combination of the selected splittings from all relevant appendices is presented in the center panel, and the combination of the reduced sets from all relevant appendices is shown in the right panel of Fig. 4.
The complete set of splittings leads to an inconclusive fit: minimal \(\chi ^2\) is found at two edges of our grid, namely for the combinations \(\omega =0.6\) GeV with \(D=0.9~\hbox {GeV}^2\) and \(\omega =0.4\) GeV with \(D=1.7~\hbox {GeV}^2\). To check that this is a legitimate result, we need to actually have a look at the comparison, which is shown for the latter data set in the left panel of Fig. 5. Apparently, the inclusion of too many (all) splittings did not properly capture the essence of the mass spectrum. One of the main reasons is certainly the importance and somewhat exceptional role of the pion ground state and all associated splittings. This peculiarity of the light-meson spectrum, however, is an essential feature and cannot be ignored or underrepresented like in this attempt, if it is to be successful.
As a comparison the center and right panels of Fig. 4 show a much more conclusive situation; in fact, they look almost identical: Both for the selected and the reduced set (which contains a total of only eight splittings), the optimal set on our grid is \(\omega =0.5\) GeV with \(D=1.7~\hbox {GeV}^2\), for which the corresponding result for light isovector-meson masses is plotted in the right panel of Fig. 5 and provides a reasonable, albeit still unsatisfactory match to the experimental states. While having found the optimal parameter set at the boundary of our grid suggests an enlargement of the grid towards higher values of D, the slope of the \(\chi ^2\) surface shows signs of a minimum very close to our values quoted here. Thus and due to the straight-forward and simple matching strategy employed here, we postpone such a step to future investigations. In fact, an improved description of the data will probably rather be accomplished by exploring more parameters/degrees of freedom in the RL effective interaction or introducing corrections beyond RL truncation, both of which are beyond the scope of the present study.
A final remark is in order: The comparison of the two panels in Fig. 5 shows also, how two points rather close together in our \(\omega \)–D parameter space can yield results of rather different quality. On close inspection of the various \(\chi ^2\) plots one indeed finds a significant change between the two points \(\omega =0.4\) GeV with \(D=1.7~\hbox {GeV}^2\) and \(\omega =0.5\) GeV with \(D=1.7~\hbox {GeV}^2\) in their majority.
4 Orbital angular momentum decomposition
4.1 Orbital angular momentum in a covariant approach
In a covariant DSBSE framework the BSA of a state is more complex than a quantum-mechanical wave function. In particular, the defining properties of total angular momentum J, parity P and, if the meson is its own antiparticle, charge-conjugation parity C are not restricted like in a quark-model setup [136,137,138]. There, a \(q\bar{q}\) meson content permits only certain sets of quantum numbers, which are usually referred to as “conventional”, while those unavailable are referred to as “exotic”. We list the conventional cases in Table 1 as they are decomposed with regard to the total \(q\bar{q}\) spin s and orbital angular momentum l, together with the usual spectroscopic notation. In correspondence with the results presented herein, we include total angular momentum J up to \(J=2\).
While l and s are not observable, they are typical subjects in discussions of meson structure and make sense in our approach in connection with the covariant structures in the meson BSA and their relation to the Pauli–Lubanski operator; see [139] and Appendix A. In short, covariants in the BSA can be put in correspondence with \(\bar{q}q\) orbital angular momentum in the meson’s rest frame. Contrary to the restrictions of the quark model, however, one finds P-wave content in, e. g., pseudoscalar and vector mesons or S-wave content in scalar or axial-vector states.
The latter also highlights the essential difference in terms of the construction of the relevant amplitude: a nonrelativistic quantum-mechanical wave function is constructed via certain limited sets of s and l to have the correct \(J^{PC}\), while a covariant BSA is defined via \(J^{PC}\), and the rest-frame s and l contents are determined dynamically by the solution of the homogeneous BSE.
Here we present an orbital angular momentum decomposition (OAMD), i. e., an analysis based on contributions of a state’s covariants to the canonical norm [140] of the Bethe–Salpeter wave function \(\chi \) in Eq. (1). More precisely, in RL truncation the square of the norm is proportional to a derivative of the integral
with respect to \(P^\mu \) appearing as arguments of the inverse quark propagators. The conjugate amplitude is defined by
where \(\mathscr {C}\) is the charge-conjugation operator in Dirac space and the superscript \({}^t\) denotes transposition.
Now we write \(\chi \) as a sum of covariants with Lorentz-scalar coefficient functions as
where \(N=4\) if \(J=0\) and \(N=8\) otherwise, and \((\mu )\) represents open Lorentz indices, where necessary [21]. Having the four vectors q, P, and \(\gamma \) at our disposal, we can construct the four standard Dirac covariants
where \(\mathbf {1}\) represents the unit matrix in Dirac space and the transversely projected relative momentum \(q^{(T)}\) is defined via
which is apparently simplified by using the unit momentum in P direction instead, \(\hat{P}\). These four covariants constitute a scalar meson; multiplied by a factor of \(\gamma _5\) each, they define a pseudoscalar BSA.
Covariants for spin-1 mesons are necessarily transverse with respect to P as required of a massive spin-1 boson and have a BSA with one open Lorentz index. One can directly construct the corresponding vector-meson covariants by multiplying both \(\gamma ^{\mu (T)}\) and \(q^{\mu (T)}\) by each of the four covariants given above in Eq. (8), yielding a total of eight tensors. Axial-vector covariants are obtained from these eight by multiplication with a factor of \(\gamma _5\) each in analogy to the scalar/pseudoscalar case. The general construction principle for BSAs with arbitrary J can be found in [21].
Regarding the importance of quark orbital angular momentum in a state, we compute the contributions of each combination of covariants from the sum as defined in Eq. (7) in the factors \(\bar{\chi }\) and \(\chi \) to the norm in Eq. (5). To identify l via the \(T_i\), we have computed each covariant’s eigenvalue for the operator \(L^2\), defined in Appendix A. A complete corresponding set of covariants for the cases \(J^P=0^+\), \(0^-\), \(1^-\), and \(1^+\) is given in this appendix in Eqs. (A.8)–(A.10). In addition, Appendix A includes all technical details and a discussion of possible influences on the OAMD as presented here.
Simply put, each occurrence of the relative quark–antiquark momentum q corresponds to one unit of orbital angular momentum l. In this way, among the scalar covariants there are two S-wave and two P-wave. In the pseudoscalar case the situation is the same. For the vector and axial-vector cases, there are two S-wave, four P-wave, and two D-wave covariants.
4.2 Quantifying orbital angular momentum
With these definitions we are prepared for our analysis: inserting the sum of Eq. (7) for both \(\chi \) and \(\bar{\chi }\) in Eq. (5) we obtain \(N^2\) terms, each with a specific combination of one covariant from \(\chi \) and one from \(\bar{\chi }\), which we denote via the corresponding pair of numbers assigned to the covariants in Appendix A for each particular case. Squaring the contribution from each combination of covariants and normalizing the sum of all squared contributions to 1, we have a quantitative as well as illustrative tool at our disposal.
The following illustrations plot these contributions in comparison to each other and using different colors to identify contributions from S, P, and D waves, which is annotated in Fig. 6.
The corresponding numbers are plotted in Fig. 7 for all ground states directly accessible to our solution via the homogeneous BSE, i. e., for \(J=0,1\), including those with exotic quantum numbers.
We note here that mesons with exotic quantum numbers appear naturally in our covariant approach as radial excitations in a certain \(J^P\) channel. Orbital angular momentum with respect to the \(\bar{q}q\) relative momentum as investigated here has recently been shown to play no role in distinguishing between exotic and conventional states [136], where also an in-depth discussion of issues related to exotic quantum numbers can be found. Thus, it is not surprising to see rather strong similarities of, e. g., the \(0^{-+}\) and \(0^{--}\) or the \(1^{--}\) and \(1^{-+}\) ground states in Fig. 7. For our purpose, we simply regard the states presented here as the ground states in their respective \(J^{PC}\) channel for the sakes of demonstration and completeness. We also provide the numbers for the plots of Fig. 7 for each state in Table 2 for easy reference and a thorough basis for the discussion together with the corresponding experimental isovector meson, where available. Note that numbers are rounded to one decimal.
A comment on the model parameters used to obtain the data in Figs. 7 and 8 is in order. In Fig. 7 we present results for the best-fit data set with \(\omega =0.5\) GeV and \(D=1.7~\hbox {GeV}^2\). Higher states are not accessible to a direct solution via the homogeneous BSE due to the fact that quark-propagator singularities cannot easily be taken into account numerically in our setup, which results in a maximum meson mass obtainable directly. One can ameliorate this situation and estimate e. g. bound-state masses by extrapolation techniques [21, 77], solution of the inhomogeneous BSE [71, 76], or making Ansätze for the \(F_i\) in Eq. (7) together with the quark dressing functions and taking into account the effect of singularities explicitly [9]. However, in all these cases, the direct connection to QCD via explicit solution of the quark DSE and the homogeneous meson BSE is lost at least to some extent. In addition, the above techniques for an OAMD analysis are based on the normalization of the on-shell bound-state amplitude.
4.3 Ground and excited states
Our results provide a picture largely consistent with expectations. All ground states are predominantly represented by their expected orbital angular momentum contribution: the pseudoscalar- and vector-meson ground states are predominantly S-wave, while the scalar- and axialvector-meson ground states are predominantly P-wave, including their exotic counterparts.
Naturally, the next interesting question is the OAMD for excitations in a given \(J^{PC}\) channel. To achieve this and overcome the limit introduced by singularities in the quark propagators discussed above, we investigate a different set of model parameters, namely \(\omega =0.3\) GeV and \(D=1.3~\hbox {GeV}^2\), where a number of radial excitations is directly accessible for investigation via the homogeneous BSE [49, 136]. As a prominent and instructive example, we investigate the vector-meson case, for which the results are plotted in Fig. 8 and the corresponding numbers are collected in Table 3 together with possible experimental assignments.
In particular, the first row in Fig. 8 shows the ground state as well as the first and second excitations in the \(\rho \)-meson channel. Comparison of the \(1^{--}\) ground-state plots in Figs. 7 and 8 as well as the corresponding numbers in Tables 2 and 3 already indicate that the OAMD is robust under changes of the model parameters \(\omega \) and D within the reasonable range employed herein. To make an even more convincing case, we computed and plotted a large set of OAMD results for the first \(1^{--}\) excitation, spanning the entire \(\omega -D\) grid, side by side in Fig. 12 in Appendix A. From this comparison it is apparent that the \(1(1^{--})\) OAMD results are very robust in a both qualitative and quantitative manner.
Thus, conclusions from this different set of parameters can be confidently expected to also hold for our best-fit parameter choice as well as for, e. g., the pair (0.7, 1.7), which leads to an accurate \(\rho (1450)\) mass as plotted in Fig. 3. The latter case is interesting in particular for the reliability of the OAMD results presented herein in the light of the sometimes rather poor description of experimental spectra by our model results for a certain parameter set.
We find the \(\rho \) ground state with a pure S-wave component of roughly 87%. Pure other components are almost negligible and mixes provide the remaining contributions to the canonical norm. For the first excitation in this channel, matched to the experimental \(\rho (1450)\), the situation is a bit more complex: the state has a predominant D-wave component of 73%. Pure S-wave and P-wave contributions are small and the remaining contributions come from mixed terms. For the second excitation in the \(1^{--}\) channel we find a predominantly S-wave OAMD, much like for the \(\rho \) with the pure S-wave percentage even higher at 99%. In this case, the experimental assignment in terms of the next excitation in the channel is not clear, however, since the \(\rho (1570)\) needs confirmation; the next higher-lying state in this channel is the \(\rho (1700)\). We thus leave this correspondence open for the sake of simplicity. The presence of both S- and D-wave in this channel still suggests more excited states than, e. g., in the pseudoscalar case.
4.4 Orbital angular momentum as a function of the quark or pion mass
This is interesting to compare, e. g., to recent studies in lattice QCD, where the meson spectrum has been an object of intense study, including the role of orbital angular momentum and the grouping of states in (super)multiplets [128,129,130, 141], as well as in particular the \(\rho \) meson and its excitations regarding their orbital angular momentum properties [142, 143]. The former reference, for a pion mass of \(\sim 700\) MeV, finds the \(\rho (1450)\) to be an S-wave [130], while in the latter, at a pion mass of 289 MeV, the \(\rho (1450)\) is found to be predominantly D-wave. Note that the quark model predicts the first excitation in the \(1^{--}\) channel to be S-wave for all quarkonia regardless of the quark mass, e. g., [144].
To investigate this discrepancy, we studied the S- or D-wave assignments of the first and second excitation in the \(1^{--}\) channel in our results as functions of the pion mass, plotted in Fig. 9. Interestingly, we find that in our model there is a crossing of the two excited states a bit above a current-quark mass of 250 MeV, which in our calculation corresponds to a pion mass of \(m_\pi \approx 1.4\) GeV. Below this scale, the first excitation in the vector channel is predominantly D-wave and above predominantly S-wave; we have extended our study up to the charm-quark mass, where our results and OAMD interpretation for the first two excitations of the \(J/\varPsi \) are in line with quark model, experiment, and lattice QCD [145].
To further illustrate the crossing, we have collected a representative set of OAMD plots along the excited-state curves from Fig. 9 and displayed them in a very compact fashion in Fig. 10. In this figure, the lower row represents the first and the upper row the second excitation. One can clearly see the transition above but apparently close to the quark-mass value of 250 MeV.
While our study presents an RL model result, it is well conceivable that such a crossing is an actual feature of the spectrum also in lattice-QCD and will be found by both groups at a scale in between their respective pion-mass values, thus reconciling their different interpretations of the \(\rho (1450)\). Such a scenario is in clear contrast to the traditional quark model.
However, it is important to remark that a simple interpretation of the \(\rho (1450)\) in terms of a radial versus an orbital excitation does not seem adequate in the DSBSE approach, since all excitations belong to the same tower of \(1^{--}\) states in a natural way.
Generally speaking, in our approach there is no reason why the excitations of the \(\rho \) found in experiment should not be arbitrary mixtures of S- and D-waves, a feature appearing naturally also in our RL treatment. Other interpretations of the excited states found in experiment in the \(1^{--}\) channel include also hybrid admixtures [146, 147]. The notion of hybrids makes use of explicit gluonic degrees of freedom, which is content implicit in our approach via the construction and degrees of freedom contained in a covariant quark-bilinear Bethe–Salpeter amplitude [86, 136, 148]. Thus, there is no contradiction of our results with such interpretations. Further information regarding an identification of our states with regard to experimental data will come from a study of hadronic decay widths along the lines of [39, 57], which is work in progress. This will also allow a comparison with quark-model results and interpretation, where hadronic partial widths are decisive elements pro or contra hybrid admixtures for excited \(\rho \) states [146, 147, 149, 150].
4.5 Further examples
To complement the vector-meson picture, we present the ground and first excited states for the exotic \(1^{-+}\), as well as the strange ground state, i. e., the \(K^*(892)\). The OAMD for the two lowest-lying \(1^{-+}\) is very similar to the \(1^{--}\) case. While the identification of these two \(1^{-+}\) states with the experimental \(\pi _1(1400)\) and \(\pi _1(1600)\) is debatable, e. g., [86, 151, 152], we find a predominantly S-wave ground state and a D-wave first excitation. The \(K^*(892)\) looks very similar to the \(\rho \) as well, which is not surprising, given the context of SU(3) flavor symmetry in QCD.
To complete this section, we present all OAMD results combined in a single plot in Fig. 11. A similar analysis for heavy quarkonia will be provided elsewhere.
5 Conclusions and outlook
We present a covariant study of the light isovector-meson spectrum. Via various comparisons of our calculated results for mass splittings to experimental data, we investigated the role and importance of the two characteristic features of the effective interaction used herein, which are the strength of the interaction’s intermediate-momentum part represented by the parameter D on the one hand, and the inverse effective range of the interaction represented by the parameter \(\omega \) and easily visible as the peak position of the effective interaction in momentum space.
At the beginning of the analysis we revisit the problem of isovector exotic-vector states, which was already discussed previously [86] and add an in-depth discussion of the situation, presenting also predictions for the lowest-lying \(\bar{s}s\) states in the \(1^{-+}\) channel.
Then, in a step-by-step fashion, we investigate our results for radial, orbital, other, and pion-related isovector-meson mass splittings and their dependence on the two parameters in our model. The following conclusions may be drawn from our results:
First, for most individual splittings in our investigation, the dependence on \(\omega \) was more pronounced and important for a good match to experimental data than the one on D in the sense that for the optimal \(\omega \) region the dependence on D was very small.
Second, since our RL-truncated approach somewhat simplifies the problem and ignores both non-resonant and resonant effects expected beyond RL, achieving a good fit to experimental light-meson data would not be a sign of an accurate description of the physics mechanisms behind those states. It is thus also unsurprising that fitting all available splittings does not provide the best match to the data. In order to find a better match, we select sets of splittings from each category in two steps and, in the end, combine them as such to arrive at an overall result. Our general impression is that choosing a small but reliable set of splittings provides the best results.
Third, the pion emerges as a critical state for the fitting process in the sense that its mass is fixed in our study due to its protection via the axial-vector Ward–Takahashi identity. As a result, pion-related splittings appear to be substantially more important than others for achieving a reasonable match of our calculated results to experimental data.
Finally, regarding preferred parameter values from our investigations we find that \(\omega \) values lower on our grid together with high D values provide the best matching result. This means an inverse effective range of the model interaction of 0.5 GeV, which is at the upper end of the domain originally investigated by Maris and Tandy [8], but with an increased overall strength of the interaction. This is different from our results obtained previously for heavy quarkonia [85], where the resulting inverse effective range was 0.7 GeV. This means that for our setup the important features of the effective interaction are shorter range in heavy quarkonia and longer range in the light-quark sector.
In our analysis of the orbital angular momentum decomposition of the covariant Bethe–Salpeter wave functions, the ground states follow intuitive patterns. For excited states in the \(1^{--}\) channel, concretely for excitations of the \(\rho \) meson, our results for the \(\rho (1450)\) show a predominant D-wave component. We compare this to corresponding and contradicting results from lattice QCD by investigating our results as functions of the pion mass from the chiral limit to charmonium. We find a level crossing of the S- and D-wave vector excitations at an intermediate scale of \(m_\pi \approx 1.4\) GeV, which, if transferrable to lattice studies, might reconcile different results obtained at different pion masses.
Overall, our result is in contrast to a \(\bar{q}q\) state in the quark model. Quark-model interpretations of the \(\rho \) excitations in terms of hybrid admixtures are not contradicted, however, since such contributions are implicit in our approach. Further insight is expected from upcoming studies of hadronic partial decay widths of these states.
As an outlook we note that the possibilities of making the effective interaction more general and flexible have still not been exhausted and present the most promising path for making a study such as ours more successful in the present RL setup. Steps beyond the current truncation are promising as well, with a clear emphasis on non-resonant corrections, in particular in the light-quark sector.
These will be important in the light of ongoing and future experimental efforts at JLab, where GlueX has started taking data recently [153], the \(\bar{\mathrm {P}}\)ANDA facility at FAIR, as well as programs at CERN, Beijing, and KEK with a focus on exotic and excited meson states.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge valuable discussions with G. Eichmann, M. Pak, C. Popovici and R. Williams.
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This work was supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) under project no. P25121-N27.
Appendices
Appendix A: Quark orbital angular momentum of the BSA
In Sect. 4 we discuss quark orbital angular momentum in the BSA based on the covariants present in each particular state. In this appendix we detail the connection to the Pauli–Lubanski operator and, in particular, the square of the orbital-angular-momentum operator.
Such a discussion of particle spin rests on a general, relativistic footing, where the angular momentum of a particle’s state is obtained via the Pauli–Lubanski vector operator
The operators J and P are built from the 10 generators of the Poincaré group. The square \(W^\mu W^\mu \) is one of the two Casimir operators of the Poincaré group and, in particular if P is taken normalized to one, yields the total angular momentum \(j(j+1)\) as the eigenvalue of a relativistic quantum state.
In our case, we deal with a covariant quark-bilinear BSA with the main focus on quark orbital angular momentum, which can be obtained by splitting \(W^\mu :=S^\mu +L^\mu \) and computing the corresponding eigenvalues \(l(l+1)\) of the operator \(L^\mu L^\mu \) acting on the covariant Dirac tensors in the BSA. In the meson’s rest frame l can then be interpreted in the usual way, i. e., \(l=0\) corresponds to an S-wave, \(l=1\) to a P-wave, \(l=2\) to a D-wave, etc.
\(L^\mu \) is given by the expression
where q and \(\hat{P}\) are the quark relative four-momentum and unit total meson momentum, respectively; see, e. g., [74]. The Dirac part is trivial and we omit it for simplicity.
\(L^2:=L^\rho L^\rho \), in turn, is given by
where the following definitions and relations are helpful:
is the transversely projected relative momentum with respect to P, whose square is
In addition, analogously,
We list the covariants together with their \(L^2\) eigenvalues in Eqs. (A.8)–(A.10) below. For completeness as well as easy reference, we also provide the eigensign \(\mathbf {C}\) of each covariant under charge conjugation defined in analogy to Eq. (6), i. e.,
where again \(\mathscr {C}\) is the charge-conjugation operator in Dirac space and the superscript \({}^\mathrm {t}\) denotes transposition.
Applying Eq. (A.3) to the standard four linearly independent scalar Dirac covariants as defined in Sect. 4, one obtains the following correspondence:
where \(\mathbf {1}\) represents the unit matrix in Dirac space. Since the Dirac part of \(L^2\) is trivial, multiplication by \(\gamma _5\) does not change any of these correspondences, which yields the pseudoscalar assignments:
For the vector case, one has eight covariants and finds the following correspondence:
Multiplying each covariant again by \(\gamma _5\), one arrives at the axial-vector case, where
It is an interesting point to ask for possible influences on the OAMD as presented here. Possible concerns include the non-unique construction via the canonical norm, gauge-dependence, as well as dependences on the renormalization and regularization procedures.
In a truncated DSBSE approach, one can always expect some gauge dependence of the results via the truncation, in the sense that while choosing a gauge in principle may not make that much of a difference, truncating the system of integral equations, albeit at the same level, may have a larger effect by yielding different results in different gauges.
Since orbital angular momentum is not observable but simply a welcome concept to interpret certain results in a way that has been and still is very accessible for people to discuss via the basic concepts of textbook quantum theory, our construction may be altered or a quantitative object different from the canoncial norm may be choosen to arrive at OAMD results. However, it is hard to see a more sensible way to construct appropriate numbers for the S-, P-, and D-wave interpretation than ours, given the restrictions of a covariant BSA decomposed into orthogonal Dirac structures with well-defined \(\mathscr {C}\)-symmetry and definite eigenvalues of \(L^2\).
Dependencies on the renormalization method and cutoff are conceivable in principle as well. However, we expect these effects to be small due to the thorough care devoted to the topics of renormalization and cutoff dependence from the very beginning of studies of this kind by Maris [5, 8]. These early publications also include a study of the asymptotic behavior of various BSA structures, from where different sensitivities to the cutoff could result. However, since we keep all covariant structures as well as a full angular setup in the numerical computation, we do not see a mechanism, from which an obvious flaw in the treatment could result, and are confident that any dependences of our OAMD results on the technical details are kept to a minimum.
To conclude this appendix, we consider a comparison of the OAMD for the first \(\rho \) excitation for all points on our \(\omega -D\) grid, where the solution is directly possible via the homogeneous BSE. It is apparent that this result, as shown in Fig. 12, is both qualitatively and quantitatively very robust across the entire grid and thus supports that statements made about the OAMD for a certain parameter set are assumed equally valid for another parameter set. A more general speculation would be that they are model-independent features of the BSA. Note that for lower \(\omega \) some D values were intermittently left out in order to keep the number of plots reasonable.
Appendix B: Exotic mesons revisited
In short, the problem investigated in [86] was how to reach a good fit of the \(\pi _1\) spectrum without actually fitting it. To illustrate our region of interest we turn directly to the \(\pi _1\) states and plot a comparison for the radial splitting between the ground and first excited \(1^{-+}\) states, \([1^{-+}_1-1^{-+}_0]\), in the right upper corner of Fig. 13 on the one hand. On the other hand, we add two more splittings to form a set of three, namely the splitting of each \(1^{-+}\) state to the ground-state pseudoscalar meson together with the radial exotic splitting, \(([1^{-+}_1-1^{-+}_0],[1^{-+}_1-0^{-+}_0],[1^{-+}_0-0^{-+}_0])\) and show the result at the left of the center row in Fig. 13. While the plot showing merely the exotic-vector radial splitting remains inconclusive regarding the interesting parameter domain, the combination clearly shows a region of low \(\chi ^2\) in the interior of our grid, which is the necessary prerequisite.
The next step was to identify a set of non-exotic splittings that provide similar results for our fitting attempts, i. e., a reasonable correlation to the exotic case. It turned out that axial-vector mesons are good indicators. In particular, we studied several sets of splittings. To start, the simple splitting between the \(1^{++}\) and \(1^{+-}\) ground states \([1^{++}_0-1^{+-}_0]\) is shown in the center of Fig. 13. While there is a visible trend, this does not show a clear preference in any small enough region of our grid. While at least the combination high \(\omega \) and low D are excluded, more information is needed to proceed. As a consequence, we added two more splittings analogous to the case above, namely those of each axial-vector ground state to the pseudoscalar ground state. The result is shown at the right of the center row in Fig. 13 for the combination \(([1^{++}_0-1^{+-}_0],[1^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0],[1^{+-}_0-0^{-+}_0])\), which allows one to focus on a well-defined region inside our grid as well. Even better, this plot is nicely correlated with the exotic-pseudoscalar splitting set and so our marker set of splittings was found.
On a little detour to the isoscalar case, more precisely strangeonium, one can see that additional difficulty is added with the loss of a reliable match for the pseudoscalar ground state due to SU(3) flavor mixing, which is not represented in an RL BSE kernel. More precisely and unsurprisingly, the flavor content of the meson under consideration in the RL BSE cannot change due to the effective dressed-gluon exchange interaction kernel. As a result, it does not make sense to discuss all isoscalar states, where various mixing mechanisms are at work, and we restrict our comparison to those experimental states, where a dominant \(\bar{s}s\) component is expected. As a consequence, other states are omitted from the analysis as well as from the right panel of Fig. 3 for clarity. States like the \(\eta \) or \(\eta \prime \) can still be studied in our setup via appropriate mixing of the resulting BSAs from each light-quarkonium calculation, an approach explored, e. g., in [126], with additional recent insight from [136]. However, herein we refrain from introducing more parameters in our calculation and focus on a few, concrete aspects in strangeonium.
Thus, in order to have a sensible fitting Ansatz, an alternative to \(([1^{++}_0-1^{+-}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0],[1^{+-}_0-0^{-+}_0])\) must be found to predict \(1^{-+}\) states in the strangeonium system, i. e., assuming ideal flavor mixing, along the same lines as for the heavy quarkonia. Without too much trouble, one can try two approaches: First, use the pseudoscalar ground state nonetheless by employing some dummy experimental mass for a pure light-light pseudoscalar in the comparison. Secondly, one could replace the pseudoscalar ground state by the vector ground state, which is a good choice in strangeonium due to the confirmed ideal mixing of the \(\phi \) and \(\omega \) mesons.
Following the second example, we plot \(\chi ^2\) for the isovector case and the set \(([1^{++}_0-1^{+-}_0],[1^{++}_0-1^{--}_0],[1^{+-}_0-1^{--}_0])\) in the left lower corner of Fig. 13 and also at the center of the lower row in Fig. 13 from a different angle. Apparently this works well by preferring also the large-\(\omega \)-large-D region of our grid, except that there is no clear “wall” or “boundary” signaling a best value inside our grid. The same fit on the \(s\bar{s}\) data set yields a plot shown in the lower right corner of Fig. 13. It is evident that in this case the “missing of a boundary” is even more pronounced, i. e., our grid is too small to make a definitive statement about whether or not one can find a minimum for \(\chi ^2\) in this case. However, one should not forget that with the light and strange-quark masses being rather close together, so should be the parameter sets optimal for the description of the data. This comes from the fact that, while we do allow our model parameters to be different for each quark mass as a result of our philosophy that in our phenomenological RL approach effects beyond RL truncation could be absorbed by the effective interaction and its parameters including their values, the actual variation should be moderate and thus small from the light to the strange-quark case.
We illustrated the two cases discussed above by plotting the corresponding spectra for the pair of model parameters \(\omega =0.7\) GeV and \(D=1.7~\hbox {GeV}^2\) for the isovector and \(\omega =0.8\) GeV and \(D=1.7~\hbox {GeV}^2\) for the strangeonium cases in the left and right panels of Fig. 3 in Sect. 3.3, respectively. In addition to what has been already provided in Ref. [86], we thus predict the two lowest-lying \(\bar{s}s\) states in the \(1^{-+}\) channel at 1.56 and 2.02 GeV, respectively.
Appendix C: Splittings to the pion ground state
In this section we illustrate all splittings in our study of a particular meson state to the pion ground state. This is particularly interesting, since the pion ground state is fixed to its experimental value and, in addition, its position in our computational framework is extremely robust via the inherent satisfaction of the axial-vector Ward–Takahashi identity. Thus, one has to pay special attention to this set of splittings in a fitting attempt, since varying or readjusting the current-quark mass in our framework has a drastically different effect on pion-related mass splittings on one hand and the rest on the other hand. In short, as immediately illustrated by the Gell-Mann–Oakes–Renner relation, the pion mass increases like the square root of the current-quark mass close to the chiral limit, while other meson masses rise linearly plus some small corrections.
The set presented here is comprehensive. Among these splittings, there are more prominent or dominant ones to observe. First, we mention the hyperfine splitting, which we already used at the beginning of our discussion for a first impression and example of the method and resulting statements. Next, the scalar- and axial-vector-to-pion splittings are relevant due to the lower-lying masses of these states, after which we complete the picture with the \(J=2\) states.
Precisely, the list of splittings shown in Fig. 14 is \([1^{--}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{-+}_1-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([1^{+-}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([1^{-+}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{-+}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{--}_0-0^{-+}_0]\). At first sight, the appearance of the plots for the various splittings in this figure is rather diverse; one observes trends in virtually all possible directions.
The hyperfine splitting, e. g., shows a clear preference for low \(\omega \) together with low D even beyond our grid. The scalar–pseudoscalar splitting prefers high D and a low \(\omega \) inside our domain; both axial-vector–, the exotic-vector–, and the pseudotensor–pseudoscalar splittings have their favored regions toward the center of our grid. The remaining tensor-related splittings for the \(2^{++}\) and \(2^{--}\) tend in opposite directions from each other.
Despite these different tendencies, the combined fit of all these splittings, whose favored pair of \(\omega \)–D values should also already provide a reasonable match to the experimental spectrum, shows a favored “valley” from \(\omega =0.5\) GeV combined with our highest D to \(\omega =0.6\) GeV combined with a central value for D. This result is presented in the left panel of Fig. 15. The center panel of this figure shows a fit of five selected splittings of lower mass as an intermediate step, namely \([1^{--}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{-+}_0-0^{-+}_0]\). Finally, we reduce the fit to the three splittings \([1^{--}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\) and the corresponding result is shown in the right panel of Fig. 15. This refinement does not do much qualitatively except that it favors a value of \(\omega =0.5\) GeV more clearly with our two steps of reducing the numbers of splittings involved in the fit.
Appendix D: Radial splittings
Splittings between radial excitations and ground states of the various quantum numbers in the meson spectrum play a dominant role in phenomenology. We investigate the splittings between ground state and first radial excitation individually for all \(J^{PC}\) with \(J<3\) and add the pseudoscalar second-to-first radial excitation splitting as a testing case for higher excitations; the resulting plots for \(\chi ^2\) as described above are collected in Fig. 16.
From the collection of comparisons in Fig. 16 one sees a few interesting features: First of all, it appears that for radial splittings the dependence on D is minor compared to \(\omega \), because in the regions of optimal \(\omega \), any D-dependence is suppressed. Investigating which values of \(\omega \) favor a good match to the experimental splittings, we arrive at lower \(\omega \) for \(J^{PC}=0^{-+}\), \(0^{++}\), \(2^{--}\), and also \(1^{-+}\); the latter case is shown above in the right panel of the upper row in Fig. 13. Higher \(\omega \) is favored by \(1^{+-}\), while the situation is inconclusive for \(2^{++}\), \(2^{-+}\), and the second-to-first \(0^{-+}\) radial splitting. \(1^{++}\) as well as \(1^{--}\) provide optimal \(\omega \) values inside our domain of study. Furthermore, we note at this point that the pseudoscalar channel is special due to the particular role of the pion as the pseudo-Goldstone boson in QCD. Pion-related splittings are thus discussed in more detail in Appendix C.
At this point, it is insightful to compare the following fitting results collected in Fig. 17: A combination of all eight radial splittings between ground and first radial excited states shown in Fig. 16 together with the same splitting in the exotic-vector channel is plotted in the left panel of Fig. 17. For the center panel in the same figure we reduced the set and remain only with the radial splittings in the \(0^{-+}\), \(1^{--}\), \(0^{++}\), \(2^{++}\), and \(1^{-+}\) channels. The right panel shows a fit with only \(0^{-+}\) and \(1^{--}\) radial splittings remaining.
The characteristics of the three panels in Fig. 17 is surprisingly different. For all splittings combined (left panel) the region with the lowest \(\chi ^2\) seems to lie outside or at the borders of our grid for the most part. Reducing the set (center panel), we observe a general trend towards lower values of \(\omega \) almost independent of D. For the pseudoscalar-vector-only set, however, we see the best agreement inside our grid for \(\omega =0.5\) GeV and medium values of D. Interpreting these results, one may refer to arguments that non-resonant corrections to RL truncation are smaller for the pseudoscalar and vector channels than the others [154] and thus expect the corresponding choice of splittings to be most appropriate regarding a \(q\bar{q}\)-core description. Demanding an overall description on the basis of radial splittings alone, however, we would have to conclude that the \(\omega \)–D grid we use is too small.
Appendix E: Orbital splittings
Another interesting group of splittings among meson states with various quantum numbers is the set of orbital splittings, i. e., those corresponding to a change in the internal quantum number corresponding to quark–antiquark orbital angular momentum in the simple quark-model picture of the \(q\bar{q}\) state. While our covariant approach is more general and the Bethe–Salpeter amplitudes are more complex than a quantum-mechanical wave function, we can still interpret our splittings between different sets of \(J^{PC}\) according to their corresponding quark-model deconstructions.
Investigating the various possibilities, we arrive at a comprehensive set, for which in our notation introduced above the labels are \([1^{+-}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{++}_0-1^{--}_0]\), \([0^{++}_1-1^{--}_1]\), \([1^{++}_0-1^{--}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-1^{--}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-2^{--}_0]\), \([2^{-+}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{--}_0-1^{--}_0]\), \([2^{-+}_0-1^{+-}_0]\). Among the most prominent of these for our purposes is certainly the splitting between the scalar and vector mesons, since experimentally these are, after the pion, the lowest-lying meson masses. We therefore include not only the corresponding ground-state splitting, but also the one for the first radial excitations of both the scalar- and the vector-meson channels. Interestingly enough, the \(\rho (1450)\) and the \(a_0(1450)\) are roughly degenerate, which makes this comparison more than a simple exercise or test of the method for higher excited states.
We find for the particular case of the scalar-vector splittings that the ground-state splitting shows an optimal range for \(\omega =0.6\) or 0.7 GeV and slightly adjusted central values of D, while the excited-state case is not particularly well reproduced. In general, again, we observe that for the optimal \(\omega \) range or case in each individual plot, it appears that the dependence on D is secondary much like for the radial splittings.
Of similar interest are the splittings of the ground states in the axial-vector and tensor \(J^{++}\) channel to the vector channel for reasons of consistency and the still rather low values of their masses. For these we find optimal \(\omega \) values inside our grid and thus a good basis for our comparison. From the rest of the set, a convincing case comes also from the pseudoscalar–pseudotensor splitting.
As for trends towards certain values of \(\omega \) and D we observe that lower values of \(\omega \) outside our grid are only favored by the pseudoscalar–axial-vector splitting, and higher values outside our grid seem to be favored by the ground-state splitting of the \(2^{--}-1^{--}\) channels. Inconclusive situations appear only for the radially excited splitting and the tensor–pseudotensor splitting, the rest provides a solid base for our strategy to find the optimal model parameters.
In the same manner as above for the radial splittings, we present three choices also for the set of orbital splittings in Fig. 18: all splittings, whose \(\omega \)–D dependence is plotted above in Fig. 19 are combined to yield the \(\chi ^2\) shown in the left panel of Fig. 18. For the second plot shown in the center panel of Fig. 18 we choose the following five splittings: \([1^{+-}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{++}_0-1^{--}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-1^{--}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-1^{--}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-2^{--}_0]\). Finally, we reduce the set to \([1^{+-}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{++}_0-1^{--}_0]\) and the result is shown in the right panel of Fig. 18.
The result from the combined fit to all orbital splittings depicted in the left panel of Fig. 18 shows an optimal \(\omega \) of 0.6 GeV with central values of D, which is not changed by reducing the number of splittings and plotting the center panel of the same figure. The right panel shows only a slight shift towards \(\omega =0.7\) GeV for the minimal fitting set of splittings and thus a very stable and uniform result.
Appendix F: Other splittings
In this section we move towards completing the picture by adding a set of splittings which falls neither in the radial nor the orbital category and was not mentioned above yet (like, e. g., the hyperfine splitting). The set investigated here and depicted in Fig. 20 is \([0^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([0^{++}_1-0^{-+}_1]\), \([2^{-+}_0-2^{++}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-0^{++}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-1^{++}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-0^{++}_0]\), \([2^{--}_0-2^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{-+}_0-1^{--}_0]\).
This is led by the pseudoscalar–scalar splitting which again refers to states among the lowest lying in mass. Again, we have included the analogous splitting of the corresponding first radial excitations of these states. The result for the ground-state splitting shows a significant D dependence for the optimal \(\omega \) domain for the first time, namely there is a significant trend towards the low-\(\omega \)-high-D corner. All other plots in the set show a minor D dependence in each optimal \(\omega \) domain, once again.
The next interesting set of splittings concerns those among the typical \(l=1\) states, i. e., the ground states in the \(0^{++}\), \(1^{++}\), and \(2^{++}\) channels. Here we find a uniform and clear trend towards \(\omega \) values outside the lower end of our grid.
The section’s set of splittings is completed by those to the \(2^{-+}\) pseudotensor ground state, which all favor center values of \(\omega \) without any particular preference for D.
The combined fitting attempts for the set of splittings presented in this section is shown in Fig. 21 in the usual fashion: the left panel shows the result for all splittings combined, the center panel shows the result for an intermediate set, namely the four splittings: \([0^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([2^{-+}_0-2^{++}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-0^{++}_0]\), \([2^{++}_0-1^{++}_0]\), and finally, we reduce the fit to \([0^{++}_0-0^{-+}_0]\), \([1^{++}_0-0^{++}_0]\) and display the result in the right panel of Fig. 21.
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Hilger, T., Gómez-Rocha, M. & Krassnigg, A. Light-quarkonium spectra and orbital-angular-momentum decomposition in a Bethe–Salpeter-equation approach. Eur. Phys. J. C 77, 625 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-017-5163-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-017-5163-4