# Thomas C. Mehen

### Professor of Physics

Office Location:
249 Physics Bldg, Durham, NC 27708
Box 90305, Durham, NC 27708-0305
Phone:
(919) 660-2555

### Overview

Prof.~Thomas Mehen works primarily on Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) and the application of effective field theory (EFT) to problems in hadronic physics. EFTs rely on three key ideas: i) identifying the relevant degrees of freedom for a specific physical process; ii) using symmetries of QCD to simplify or constrain the form of interactions; and iii) finding small parameters, either small coupling constants or ratios of disparate mass scales, which can be used to formulate systematic perturbative calculations of observables.

Much of Mehen's research involves hadrons containing one or more heavy quarks. A long standing problem in QCD is understanding the production mechanism of heavy quarkonium (bound states of heavy quarks and antiquarks) in collider experiments. Mehen has worked on this problem throughout his career. Recently he and his collaborators proposed new tests of quarkonium production theory involving quarkonium produced within jets which motivated experimental measurements by colleagues at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Another important area of research is exotic quarkonium. Since 2003, particle and nuclear physics experiments around the world have discovered dozens of unusual particles that do not fit in to the conventional picture of quarkonium as a nonrelativistic bound state of heavy quark and antiquark. Some of these so-called XYZ mesons are thought to be molecular bound states of heavy mesons. Mehen has invented EFTs for these particles that are widely used to predict the properties of these mesons and interpret experimental data.

Mehen played a role in developing the Soft Collinear Effective Theory (SCET) which is an EFT suitable for processes in which there are one or more highly energetic quarks or gluons. This theory is now widely used in the study of energetic jets of particles produced at the LHC and other collider experiments. Mehen has been a leader in applying SCET to quarkonium production in colliders. He is also an expert on EFTs for strongly interacting systems with shallow two-body bound states and/or large scattering lengths, and has applied these EFTs to a wide variety of physical systems: low energy two- and three-body nuclear physics, the XYZ mesons, cold trapped atoms, and strongly interacting nuclei embedded in a QED plasma, which is potentially relevant for astrophysics and cosmology. In his research, Mehen frequently applies heavy hadron chiral perturbation theory (HH$\chi$PT), which combines the heavy quark and chiral symmetries of QCD and is used to study the low energy behavior of heavy hadrons. Mehen and his student invented a version of HH$\chi$PT suitable for baryons and tetraquarks with two heavy quarks for the purpose of studying the doubly charm baryon recently discovered at the LHC and related states.

Some Prof. Mehen's work crosses over into other areas of physics. For example, techniques developed for nuclear physics have been used to calculate three-body corrections to the energy density of a Bose-Einstein condensate whose atoms have large scattering lengths. Prof. Mehen has also worked on novel field theories which arise from unusual limits of string theory. Examples include noncommutative field theories and theories of tachyonic modes on non-BPS branes.

### Education & Training

• M.A., Johns Hopkins University 1997

• Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University 1997

• B.S., University of Virginia 1992

### Selected Grants

TMD Collaboration awarded by Brookhaven National Labs (Principal Investigator). 2018 to 2021

Lattice and Effective Field Theory Studies of Quantum Chromodynamics awarded by Department of Energy (Co-Principal Investigator). 2005 to 2021

Heavy Quarks, QCD, and Effective Field Theory awarded by Department of Energy (Principal Investigator). 2005 to 2009

Fleming, S., et al. “An effective field theory approach to quarkonium at small transverse momentum.” Journal of High Energy Physics, vol. 2020, no. 4, Apr. 2020. Scopus, doi:10.1007/JHEP04(2020)122. Full Text

Mehen, T., and A. Mohapatra. “Perturbative corrections to heavy quark-diquark symmetry predictions for doubly heavy baryon hyperfine splittings.” Physical Review D, vol. 100, no. 7, Oct. 2019. Scopus, doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.100.076014. Full Text

Yao, X., and T. Mehen. “Quarkonium in-medium transport equation derived from first principles.” Physical Review D, vol. 99, no. 9, May 2019. Scopus, doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.99.096028. Full Text

Mehen, T., and A. Mohapatra. “Doubly heavy baryons and corrections to heavy quark-diquark symmetry prediction for hyperfine splitting.” Proceedings of the 2019 Meeting of the Division of Particles and Fields of the American Physical Society, Dpf 2019, Jan. 2019.

Kang, D., et al. “From underlying event sensitive to insensitive: factorization and resummation.” Journal of High Energy Physics, vol. 2018, no. 9, Sept. 2018. Scopus, doi:10.1007/JHEP09(2018)055. Full Text

Hornig, A., et al. “Transverse vetoes with rapidity cutoff in SCET.” Journal of High Energy Physics, vol. 2017, no. 12, Dec. 2017. Scopus, doi:10.1007/JHEP12(2017)043. Full Text

Mehen, T. “Implications of heavy quark-diquark symmetry for excited doubly heavy baryons and tetraquarks.” Physical Review D, vol. 96, no. 9, Nov. 2017. Scopus, doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.96.094028. Full Text

Bain, Reggie, et al. “NRQCD Confronts LHCb Data on Quarkonium Production within Jets.Physical Review Letters, vol. 119, no. 3, July 2017, p. 032002. Epmc, doi:10.1103/physrevlett.119.032002. Full Text

Yao, X., et al. “Dynamical screening of α-α Resonant scattering and thermal nuclear scattering rate in a plasma.” Physical Review D, vol. 95, no. 11, June 2017. Scopus, doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.95.116002. Full Text

## Pages

Mehen, T., and A. Mohapatra. “Doubly heavy baryons and corrections to heavy quark-diquark symmetry prediction for hyperfine splitting.” Proceedings of the 2019 Meeting of the Division of Particles and Fields of the American Physical Society, Dpf 2019, 2019.

Mehen, T. “New tests of NRQCD from Quarkonia within jets.” Proceedings of Science, vol. 26-30-May-2015, 2015.