Strong decays and effective spin-symmetry-breaking corrections in excited charm-strange mesons

Abstract

We study two-body pseudoscalar-emission decays of excited charm-strange mesons in heavy meson effective field theory, where phenomenological \(1/mc\) corrections are encoded as effective relative shifts between \(DP\) and \(D*P\) amplitudes, referred to here as effective spin-symmetry-breaking corrections. Using \(Ds2*(2573)\) data to calibrate the \(T(3/2+)\) doublet, we obtain \(h'=0.4070.034\) and \(εT=-0.2070.109\), indicating a natural effective correction of order \(20\%\). Applying this input to the \(Ds1(2460)\) and \(Ds1(2536)\) system, the Belle and LHCb partial-wave data constrain the mixing angle to \(0<θP22.0\) and \(0<θP14.6\), respectively, confirming that \(Ds1(2536)\) is dominantly a \(T(3/2+)\) state with only a small \(S(1/2+)\) admixture. In the radial sector, the pure-\(2S\) assignment gives \(R2700 LO=0.919\), consistent with the observed \(D*0K+/D0K+\) ratio of \(Ds1*(2700)\), but predicts only \(Γ ps[Ds0(2590)]20\) MeV. Allowing mixing between \(Ds1*(2700)\) and \(Ds1*(2860)\), together with a relative strong phase and effective spin-symmetry-breaking corrections, substantially increases this width while preserving agreement with the vector-state widths and \(R2700\). This scenario further gives \(R1,2860=0.911\), far from the pure-\(X\) leading-order value \(R1,2860 pure\,X=0.242\), so the spin-one \(D*K/DK\) ratio near \(2.86\) GeV offers a clear discriminator between the mixed and unmixed assignments. Overall, this scenario reduces but does not remove the \(Ds0(2590)\) width tension, leaving room for non-pseudoscalar channels, threshold effects, or coupled-channel dynamics. Reference decay patterns for \(Ds3*(2860)\), \(Ds1(2933)\), and \(DsJ(3040)\) are also given.

0

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.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…