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Theory Center Seminar<br>
Monday, March 24, 2014<br>
1:00 p.m. (coffee at 12:45 p.m.)<br>
CEBAF Center, Room L102<br>
<br>
Feng-Kun Guo<br>
University of Bonn<br>
<br>
<b>Charming Hadronic Molecules</b><br>
<br>
The spectroscopy of exotic hadrons provides a probe to color
confinement. There are different kinds of exotic hadrons: hybrids,
glueballs, multiquark states and hadron molecules. It is generally
difficult to identify them from experimental data. However, during
the last decade, strong evidence for the exotics appear in the heavy
quarkonium systems. In this talk, I will focus on one special kind
of exotic hadrons -- hadronic molecules. A few candidates of
charmonium-like hadronic molecules will be discussed. I will show
how they could be identified, and how such a goal can only be
achieved with joint efforts of experimentalists and theorists
(including lattice QCD theorists).
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