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A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities as a limitation factor in single- channel PW analysis

A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

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Page 1: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

A. Švarc

Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia

INT-09-3

The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV

(Friday, November 13, 2009)

Continuum ambiguities as a limitation factor in

single-channel PW analysis

Page 2: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Continuum ambiguity is an old problem

Page 3: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Tallahassee 2005

Page 4: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

1984

1978

1981

1978

Zgb

1985

Zgb

Zgb

1973

Today

Nothing much changed

Page 5: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

However, people are encountering problems when performing single channel PWA.

Illustration:

Page 6: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 7: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Possible explanation of the problems: continuum ambiguities

because they have single channel fit

Page 8: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

However, people are (in principle) aware of the existence of continuum ambiguities!

Page 9: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Pg. 5

Pg. 6

- Hoehler

Page 10: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 11: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

What does it mean “continuum ambiguity”?

Page 12: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Simplified definition:

In a single-channel case, phase shifts (partial wave poles) are not always uniquely defined!

Unfortunately it turns out that this is the case as soon as inelastic channels open.

Page 13: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Differential cross section (or any bilinear of scattering functions)

is not sufficient to determine the scattering amplitude:

if

then

The new function gives EXACTLY THE SAME CROSS

SECTION

Page 14: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

S – matrix unitarity …………….. conservation of flux RESTRICTS THE PHASE

elastic region ……. unitarity relates real and imaginary part of each partial wave – equality constraint

each partial wave must lie upon its unitary circle

inelastic region ……. unitarity provides only an inequality constraint between real and imaginary part

each partial wave must lie upon or inside its unitary circle

there exists a whole family of functions F , of limited magnitude but of infinite variety of functional form, which will

indeed lie upon or inside its unitary circle

HOW?

Page 15: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

These family of functions, though containing a continuum infinity of points,

are limited in extend.

The ISLANDS OF AMBIGUITY are created.

there exists a whole family of functions F , of limited magnitude but of infinite variety of functional form, which will

indeed lie upon or inside its unitary circle

Page 16: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

I M P O R T A N T

DISTINCTION

theoretical islands of ambiguity / experimental uncertainties

Page 17: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Let us illustrate this on a simple example!

Page 18: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 19: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

The treatment of continuum ambiguity problems

1. How to obtain continuity in energy?2. How to achieve uniqueness?

The issues are:

In original publications several methods are suggested.

Page 20: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 21: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

However, there is another way to restore uniqueness:

by restoring unitarity in a coupled channel formalism

Page 22: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 23: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Let us formulate what the continuum ambiguity problem means in the language of coupled channel

formalism

Page 24: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Continuum ambiguity / T-matrix poles

Each analytic function is uniquely defined with its poles and cuts.

If an analytic function contains a continuum ambiguity it is not uniquely defined.

T matrix is an analytic function in s,t.

If an analytic function is not uniquely defined, we do not

have a complete knowledge about its poles and cuts.

Consequently fully constraining poles and cuts means eliminating continuum ambiguity

Page 25: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Basic idea: we want to demonstrate the role and importance of

inelastic channels in fully constraining the poles of the partial wave T-matrix,

or, alternatively said, for eliminating continuum ambiguity which arises if

only elastic channels a considered.

Statement:

We need ALL channels, elastic AND as much inelastic ones as possible in order to uniquely define ALL scattering matrix poles.

Page 26: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

What is the procedure?

1. Having a coupled-channel formalism and fitting data only in one channel we may “mimic” single channel case.

2. By fitting one channel only we shall reveal those poles (resonant states) which dominantly couple to this channel.

3. Poles (resonant states) which do not couple to this channel will remain undetected.

4. Consequently, we have not been able to discover ALL analytic function poles, consequently the partial wave analytic function is ambiguous.

5. If we add data for the second inelastic channel, we constrain other set of poles which dominantly couple to this channel. This set of poles is overlapping with the first one, but not necessarily identical.

6. We have established a new, enlarged set of poles which is somewhat more constraining the unknown analytic function

7. We add new inelastic channels until we have found all scattering matrix poles, and uniquely identified the type of analytic PW function

Page 27: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 28: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Example 1:

The role of inelastic channels in N (1710) P11

Published:

Page 29: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 30: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

All coupled channel models are based on solving Dyson-Schwinger integral type equations, and they all have the same general structure:

full = bare + bare * interaction* full

0 0G G G G

CMB coupled-channel model

0 0 0 0 0G G G G G G G

Page 31: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Carnagie-Melon-Berkely (CMB) model

Instead of solving Lipmann-Schwinger equation of the type:

with microscopic description of interaction term

we solve the equivalent Dyson-Schwinger equation for the Green function

with representing the whole interaction term effectively.

Page 32: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

We represent the full T-matrix in the form where the channel-resonance interaction is not calculated but effectively parameterized:

channel-resonance mixing matrix

bare particle propagatorchannel propagator

Page 33: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Assumption: The imaginary part of the channel propagator is defined as:

2 2( ( ) )( ( ) )( )

4a

s M m s M mq s

s

where qa(s) is the meson-nucleon cms momentum:

And we require its analyticity through the dispersion relation:

Page 34: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

3434

0 0G G G G

we obtain the full propagator G by solving Dyson-Schwinger equation

where

we obtain the final expression

Page 35: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

We use:

1. CMB model for 3 channels: p N, h N, and dummy channel p2N 2. p N elastic T matrices , PDG: SES Ar06 3. p N ¨h N T matrices, PDG: Batinic 95

We fit:

1. πN elastic only2. p N ¨h N only3. both channels

Page 36: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Results for extracted pole positions:

Page 37: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 38: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 39: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 40: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

Conclusions

1. Continuum ambiguities appear in single channel PWA, and have to be eliminated.

2. A new way, based on reinstalling unitarity is possible within the framework of couple-channel models.

3. T matrix poles, invisible when only elastic channel is analyzed, may spontaneously appear when inelastic channels are added.

4. It is demonstrated that: the N(1710) P11 state exists

the pole is hidden in the continuum ambiguity of VPI/GWU FA02

it spontaneously appears when inelastic channels are introduced in addition to the elastic ones.

Page 41: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities

A few transparencies from NSTAR2005 talk:

Page 42: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities
Page 43: A. Švarc Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia INT-09-3 The Jefferson Laboratory Upgrade to 12 GeV (Friday, November 13, 2009) Continuum ambiguities