Mass formula for baryon resonances
- 27 November 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review C
- Vol. 66 (5)
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.66.058201
Abstract
Light-baryon resonances with u,d, and s quarks only can be classified using the non-relativistic quark model. When we assign to baryon resonances with total angular momenta J intrinsic orbital angular momenta L and spin S we make the following observations: plotting the squared masses of the light-baryon resonances against these intrinsic orbital angular momenta L, Delta's with even and odd parity can be described by the same Regge trajectory. For a given L, nucleon resonances with spin S=3/2 are approximately degenerate in mass with Delta resonances of same total orbital momentum L. To which total angular momentum L and S couple has no significant impact on the baryon mass. Nucleons with spin 1/2 are shifted in mass; the shift is - in units of squared masses - proportional to the component in the wave function which is antisymmetric in spin and flavor. Sequential resonances in the same partial wave are separated in mass square by the same spacing as observed in orbital angular momentum excitations. Based on these observations, a new baryon mass formula is proposed which reproduces nearly all known baryon masses.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figurKeywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Properties of theResonancePhysical Review Letters, 2001
- The light-baryon spectrum in a relativistic quark model with instanton-induced quark forcesThe European Physical Journal A, 2001
- The light-baryon spectrum in a relativistic quark model with instanton-induced quark forcesThe European Physical Journal A, 2001
- Properties of Regge trajectoriesPhysical Review D, 2000
- Unified description of light- and strange-baryon spectraPhysical Review D, 1998
- Algebraic Models of Hadron Structure. I. Nonstrange BaryonsAnnals of Physics, 1994
- Baryons in a relativized quark model with chromodynamicsPhysical Review D, 1986