A Search for the LHCb Charmed 'Pentaquark' using Photo-Production of J/ at Threshold in Hall C at Jefferson Lab
Abstract
We propose to measure the photo-production cross section of J/ near threshold, in search of the recently observed LHCb hidden-charm resonances Pc(4380) and Pc(4450) consistent with 'pentaquarks'. The observation of these resonances in photo-production will provide strong evidence of the true resonance nature of the LHCb states, distinguishing them from kinematic enhancements. A bremsstrahlung photon beam produced with an 11 GeV electron beam at CEBAF covers the energy range of J/ production from the threshold photo-production energy of 8.2 GeV, to an energy beyond the presumed Pc(4450) resonance. The experiment will be carried out in Hall C at Jefferson Lab using a 50μA electron beam incident on a 9% copper radiator. The resulting photon beam passes through a 15 cm liquid hydrogen target, producing J/ mesons through a diffractive process in the t-channel, or through a resonant process in the s- and u-channel. The decay e+e- pair of the J/ will be detected in coincidence using the two high-momentum spectrometers of Hall C. The spectrometer settings have been optimized to distinguish the resonant s- and u-channel production from the diffractive t-channel J/ production. The s- and u-channel production of the charmed 5-quark resonance dominates the t-distribution at large t. The momentum and angular resolution of the spectrometers is sufficient to observe a clear resonance enhancement in the total cross section and t-distribution. We request a total of 11 days of beam time with 9 days to carry the main experiment and 2 days to acquire the needed t-channel elastic J/ production data for a calibration measurement. This calibration measurement in itself will greatly enhance our knowledge of t-channel elastic J/ production near threshold.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.