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Curtis A. Meyer
Professor
B.S., Oregon State University, (1982)
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, (1987)
Email: cmeyer@cmu.edu
Office: Wean Hall, 8414
Phone: (412)
268-2745
FAX: (412)
681-0648
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Department of Physics
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890

Medium energy physics
concentrates on the non-perturbative regime of quantum chromodynamics (QCD). In
this regime, advances tend to be driven by experimental data, one source of
which is the spectrum of hadrons, both mesons and baryons. In particular, the
search for so called exotic hadrons, those which exhibit gluonic degrees of
freedom is currently a very important experimental and theoretical topic. In
order to distinguish this exotic matter from the normal hadronic matter, it is
important to make very complete studies. Information such as particle masses,
quantum numbers, decay modes and production mechanisms are important inputs to
the puzzle.
My recent work involved the the Crystal
Barrel detector at the Low Energy Antiproton Ring at CERN.
This detector is a nearly 4pi solid angle apparatus for studying objects formed
in proton antiproton annihilations at rest, and in flight. A major emphasis of
our program is to look for exotic forms of hadronic matter in particular
glueballs (only gluons) and hybrids mesons (quarks and gluons). The proton
antiproton annihilation is considered a gluon-rich environment which could
produce these exotic mesons. They then decay into mesons that are detected in
the experiment. After many years of study, we have found a particle which is a
very good candidate for the ground state glueball. Data analysis is currently
finishing up on this experiment, with the last phases of this experiment
concentrating on important decay channels, as well as the production mechanism
itself.
If Crystal Barrel has found the ground state glueball, then this opens up a
host of questions on both normal matter, and hybrid mesons. Many of these
questions can be answered by experiments which will be performed at a new
accelerator, CEBAF at the Jefferson Lab in
Newport News, Virginia. We will start to understand some of these issues with
the current generation of CEBAF experiments, in particular the CLAS
experiment which is taking data now. However, the real information will come out
of an experiment which is currently in the research and development stage, the Hall
D effort. This experiment will involve a new hall with a spectrometer
designed and built to do meson spectroscopy in photo production. I think that
with this program, we have an excellent opportunity to resolve many of the key
issues in QCD, particularly this issue of confinement.
My current College of Science Annual
Report.

Selected Publications
H. Denizli et al. (CLAS
Collaboration), “ dependence of
the (1535)
photocoupling and evidence for a P-wave resonance in eta electroproduction”,
Phys. Rev.
C76, 015204, (2007).
T. Mibe et al. (CLAS
Collaboration), “First measurement of coherent phimeson photoproduction on
deuteron at low energies”, Phys. Rev. C76, 052202, (2007).
L. Guo et al. (CLAS
Collaboration), “Cascade production in the reactions
and ” Phys.
Rev. C76, 025208, (2007).
I. Hleiqawi et al. (CLAS
Collaboration), “Cascade production in the reactions
reaction at .” Phys. Rev. C75, 042201, (2007), Erratum-ibid.
C76, 039905, (2007).
K.S. Egiyan et al. (CLAS
Collaboration), “Experimental study of exclusive
reaction mechanisms at high
”, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 98, 262502, (2007).
My full Publication
List.
My papers available on SPIRES.
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