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arXiv:2309.12486 [hep-ph]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Revealing the Origin of Mass through Studies of Hadron Spectra and Structure

Craig D. Roberts

Published 2023-09-21Version 1

The Higgs boson is responsible for roughly 1% of the visible mass in the Universe. Obviously, therefore, Nature has another, very effective way of generating mass. In working toward identifying the mechanism, contemporary strong interaction theory has arrived at a body of basic predictions, viz. the emergence of a nonzero gluon mass-scale, a process-independent effective charge, and dressed-quarks with constituent-like masses. These three phenomena - the pillars of emergent hadron mass (EHM) - explain the origin of the vast bulk of visible mass in the Universe. Their expressions in hadron observables are manifold. This contribution highlights a few; namely, some of the roles of EHM in building the meson spectrum, producing the leading-twist pion distribution amplitude, and moulding hadron charge and mass distributions.

Comments: 8 pages, 3 figures. Summary of a plenary presentation at MESON 2023, the 17th International Workshop on Meson Physics, Krakow, Poland, 2023 June 22-27
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