The c(2595) resonance as a dynamically generated state: the compositeness condition and the large Nc evolution

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that the well established c(2595) resonance contains a large meson-baryon component, which can vary depending on the specific formalism. In this work, we examine such a picture by utilizing the compositeness condition and the large number of colors (Nc) expansion. We examine three different models fulfilling two body unitarity in coupled-channels, and adopting renormalization schemes where the mass of the c(2595) resonance is well described, but not necessarily its width, since we do not consider three body channels and work at the isospin symmetric limit. Both approximations might have an effect larger on the width than on the mass. In this context, our studies show that the compositeness of the c(2595) depends on the number of considered coupled channels, and on the particular regularization scheme adopted in the unitary approaches and, therefore, is model dependent. In addition, we perform an exploratory study of the c(2595) in the large Nc expansion, within a scheme involving only the πc and K'c channels, whose dynamics is mostly fixed by chiral symmetry. In this context and formulating the leading-order interaction as a function of Nc, we show that for moderate Nc> 3 values, the mass and width of the c(2595) deviate from those of a genuine qqq baryon, implying the relevance of meson-baryon components in its wave function. Furthermore, we study the properties of the c(2595), in the strict Nc ∞ limit, using an extension of the chiral Weinberg-Tomozawa interaction to an arbitrary number of flavors and colors. This latter study hints at the possible existence of a (perhaps) sub-dominant qqq component in the c(2595) resonance wave function, which would become dominant when the number of colors gets sufficiently large.

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