English

Baryon spectroscopy

High Energy Physics - Phenomenology 2010-11-11 v2

Abstract

About 120 baryons and baryon resonances are known, from the abundant nucleon with uu and dd light-quark constituents up to the recently discovered Ωb=bss\Omega_b^-=bss, and the Ξb=bsd\Xi_b^-=bsd which contains one quark of each generation. In spite of this impressively large number of states, the underlying mechanisms leading to the excitation spectrum are not yet understood. Heavy-quark baryons suffer from a lack of known spin-parities. In the light-quark sector, quark-model calculations have met with considerable success in explaining the low-mass excitations spectrum but some important aspects like the mass degeneracy of positive-parity and negative-parity baryon excitations are not yet satisfactorily understood. At high masses, above 1.8 GeV, quark models predict a very high density of resonances per mass interval which is not observed. In this review, issues are identified discriminating between different views of the resonance spectrum; prospects are discussed how open questions in baryon spectroscopy may find answers from photo- and electro-production experiments which are presently carried out in various laboratories.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0901.2055,
  title  = {Baryon spectroscopy},
  author = {Eberhard Klempt and Jean-Marc Richard},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0901.2055},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

Review article, 53 pages, 40 figures, 23 Tables. Review of Modern Physics (accepted for publication)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:00:47.628Z