Revisiting Axial-Vector Meson Mixing
arXiv:1110.2249 · doi:10.1016/j.physletb.2011.12.013
Abstract
Various phenomenological studies indicate that the mixing angle $θ_{K_1}$ of $K_{1A}$ and $K_{1B}$, the strange partners of the axial-vector mesons $a_1(1260)$ and $b_1(1235)$, respectively, lies in the vicinity of $35^\circ$ or $55^\circ$, but whether this angle is larger or smaller than $45^\circ$ still remains controversial. When the $f_1(1285)$-$f_1(1420)$ mixing angle $θ_{^3P_1}$ and the $h_1(1170)$-$h_1(1380)$ mixing angle $θ_{^1P_1}$ are determined from the mass relations, they depend on the masses of $K_{1A}$ and $K_{1B}$, which in turn depend on the mixing angle $θ_{K_1}$. We show that the approximate decoupling of the light $q\bar q$ state from the heavier $s \bar s$ state, which is empirically valid for vector, tensor and $3^{--}$ mesons, when applied to isoscalar axial-vector mesons, will enable us to discriminate different solutions of $θ_{^3P_1}$ and $θ_{^1P_1}$ and pick up $θ_{K_1}\sim 35^\circ$. Indeed, for $θ_{K_1}\sim 55^\circ$, the predicted $θ_{^1P_1}$ disagrees sharply with the recent lattice calculation and the implied large $s\bar s$ content of $h_1(1170)$ and $q\bar q$ component of $h_1(1380)$ cannot explain the observation of their strong decays. We conclude that $θ_{K_1}$ is smaller than $45^\circ$.
9 pages