How Robust is the Froissart bound?

Ya. I. Azimov
Phys. Rev. D 84, 056012 – Published 16 September 2011

Abstract

Proof of the Froissart theorem is reconsidered in a different way to extract its necessary conditions. Two physical inputs, unitarity and absence of massless intermediate hadrons, are indisputable. Also important are mathematical properties of the Legendre functions. Assumptions on dispersion relations, single or double, appear to be excessive. Instead, one should make assumptions on possible high-energy asymptotics of the amplitude in nonphysical configurations, which have today no firm basis. Asymptotics for the physical amplitude always appear essentially softer than for the nonphysical one. Froissart’s paper explicitly assumed the hypothesis of power behavior and obtained asymptotic bound for total cross sections log2(s/s0) with some constant s0. Our bounds are slightly stronger than original Froissart ones. They show that the scale s0 should itself slowly grow with s. Under different assumptions about asymptotic behavior of nonphysical amplitudes, the total cross section could grow even faster than log2s. The problem of correct asymptotics might be clarified by precise measurements at the LHC and higher energies.

  • Received 1 June 2011

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.84.056012

© 2011 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Ya. I. Azimov

  • Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute, St. Petersburg, 188300, Russia

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Issue

Vol. 84, Iss. 5 — 1 September 2011

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