Few-body physics
Abstract
Few-body hadronic observables play an essential role in a wide number of processes relevant for both particle and nuclear physics. In order for Lattice QCD to offer insight into the interpretation of few-body states, a theoretical infrastructure must be developed to map Euclidean-time correlation functions to the desired Minkowski-time few-body observables. In this talk, I review the formal challenges associated with the studies of such systems via Lattice QCD, as first introduced by Maiani and Testa, and I also review the methodology to circumvent said limitations. The first main example of the latter is the formalism by Luscher to analyze elastic scattering and a second is the method by Lellouch and Luscher to analyze weak decays. I discus recent theoretical generalizations of these frameworks that allow for the determination of scattering amplitudes, resonances, nonlocal contribution to matrix elements, and form factors below and above inelastic thresholds. Finally, I outline outstanding problems, including those that are now beginning to be addressed.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1411.6944,
title = {Few-body physics},
author = {Raúl A. Briceño},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1411.6944},
year = {2014}
}
Comments
15 pages, 4 figues, plenary review talk at 32nd International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory, 23-28 June, 2014, Columbia University New York, NY