Summary
This conference proceedings paper presents experimental measurements of charm hadron production from two major particle collider experiments. The work compares observed production rates of charmonium and open charm mesons against theoretical model predictions, and reports measurements of associated production involving additional quarkonium states. These results contribute to understanding the fundamental mechanisms of heavy quark hadronisation in high-energy particle collisions.
UK applicability
This theoretical particle physics research has no direct applicability to United Kingdom farming systems, soil health, or food production. The work is conducted at international particle collider facilities and addresses fundamental physics rather than agricultural or nutritional questions.
Key measures
Charm hadron production cross-sections and rates; charmonium yields; open charm meson production; quarkonium state yields
Outcomes reported
The study reported experimental measurements of charm hadron production (charmonium and open charm mesons) from proton-proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider and proton-antiproton collisions at the Tevatron, with comparison to theoretical predictions. Associated production measurements of hidden or open charm mesons with additional quarkonium states were also presented.
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