All-charm tetraquarks at hadron colliders: A high-precision fragmentation perspective
TLDR
This paper introduces TQ4Q2.0 fragmentation functions for precise studies of all-heavy tetraquark production at hadron colliders, including uncertainty quantification.
Key contributions
- Presents TQ4Q2.0 fragmentation functions for all-heavy S-wave tetraquarks ($T_{4Q}$) at hadron colliders.
- Extends TQ4Q1.1 with nonconstituent heavy-quark contributions and replica-based uncertainty quantification.
- Utilizes nonrelativistic QCD factorization and updated potential-inspired wave functions for initial inputs.
- Releases TQ4Q2.0 grids in LHAPDF6 format, providing the first complete phenomenological set for all-heavy exotics.
Why it matters
This work provides the first complete and precise phenomenological framework (TQ4Q2.0) for studying all-heavy tetraquark production at hadron colliders. It enables detailed analyses of exotic particles and jet-associated observables within the JETHAD environment. This establishes a crucial baseline for future collider-oriented analyses of all-heavy multiquark dynamics.
Original Abstract
We present the TQ4Q2.0 fragmentation functions for the production of all-heavy (fully heavy) $S$-wave tetraquarks ($T_{4Q}$) with scalar ($0^{++}$), axial-vector ($1^{+-}$), and tensor ($2^{++}$) quantum numbers in high-energy hadronic collisions. This work extends the previous TQ4Q1.1 framework by incorporating nonconstituent heavy-quark contributions and introducing a replica-based uncertainty-quantification strategy derived from multi-scale variations (MHOUs). The construction follows a nonrelativistic QCD factorization approach, combining gluon- and heavy-quark-initiated fragmentation channels at leading power. Initial-scale inputs are modeled through updated potential-inspired wave functions, while the subsequent DGLAP evolution is performed via the threshold-aware HF-NRevo scheme. A comprehensive systematic analysis of uncertainties is carried out, with contributions from color-composite long-distance matrix elements (LDMEs) and perturbative multiscale inputs. The resulting TQ4Q2.0 grids, publicly released in LHAPDF6 format, provide the first complete phenomenological set for all-heavy exotics, enabling precise studies of all-charm tetraquark production and jet-associated observables within the JETHAD environment. This article completes the high-energy resummation-driven generation of the TQ4Q program and establishes a definitive baseline for future collider-oriented analyses of all-heavy multiquark dynamics.
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