Implications of the Zcs(3985) and Zcs(4000) as two different states

Abstract

Recently, the hidden charm tetraquark states Zcs(3985) and Zcs(4000) with strangeness were observed by the BESIII and LHCb collaborations, respectively, which are great breakthroughs for exploring exotic QCD structures. The first and foremost question is whether they are the same state. In this work, we explore the implications of the narrower state Zcs(3985) in BESIII and the wider one Zcs(4000) in LHCb as two different states. Within a solvable nonrelativistic effective field theory, we include the possible violations of heavy quark spin symmetry and SU(3) flavor symmetry in a comprehensive approach. If Zcs(3985) and Zcs(4000) are two different states, our results show that Zcs(4000)/Zcs(3985) is the pure (|Ds*D+/- |DsD*)/2 state, and the SU(3) flavor partner of Zc(3900) is Zcs(4000) rather than the Zcs(3985). Another two important consequences are the existence of a tensor Ds*D* resonance with mass about 4126 MeV and width 13 MeV, and the suppression of the decay mode Zcs(3985) J/ K. The two consequences can be tested in experiments and distinguish the two-state interpretation from the one-state scheme.

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