Exotic meson composed of four valence quarks
In particle physics , a tetraquark is an exotic meson composed of four valence quarks . A tetraquark state has long been suspected to be allowed by quantum chromodynamics ,[ 1] the modern theory of strong interactions . A tetraquark state is an example of an exotic hadron which lies outside the conventional quark model classification. A number of different types of tetraquark have been observed.[ 2] [ 3]
History and discoveries
Several tetraquark candidates have been reported by particle physics experiments in the 21st century. The quark contents of these states are almost all qq QQ , where q represents a light (up , down or strange ) quark, Q represents a heavy (charm or bottom ) quark, and antiquarks are denoted with an overline. The existence and stability of tetraquark states with the qqQ Q (or q q QQ) have been discussed by theoretical physicists for a long time, however these are yet to be reported by experiments.[ 4]
Colour flux tubes produced by four static quark and antiquark charges, computed in lattice QCD .[ 5] Confinement in quantum chromodynamics leads to the production of flux tubes connecting colour charges. The flux tubes act as attractive QCD string -like potentials.
Timeline
In 2003, a particle temporarily called X(3872) , by the Belle experiment in Japan , was proposed to be a tetraquark candidate,[ 6] as originally theorized.[ 7] The name X is a temporary name, indicating that there are still some questions about its properties to be tested. The number following is the mass of the particle in MeV/c 2 .
In 2004, the DsJ (2632) state seen in Fermilab 's SELEX was suggested as a possible tetraquark candidate.[ 8]
In 2007, Belle announced the observation of the Z(4430) state, a cc du tetraquark candidate. There are also indications that the Y(4660) , also discovered by Belle in 2007, could be a tetraquark state.[ 9]
In 2009, Fermilab announced that they have discovered a particle temporarily called Y(4140) , which may also be a tetraquark.[ 10]
In 2010, two physicists from DESY and a physicist from Quaid-i-Azam University re-analyzed former experimental data and announced that, in connection with the ϒ (5S) meson (a form of bottomonium ), a well-defined tetraquark resonance exists.[ 11] [ 12]
In June 2013, the BES III experiment in China and the Belle experiment in Japan independently reported on Zc (3900) , the first confirmed four-quark state.[ 13]
In 2014, the Large Hadron Collider experiment LHCb confirmed the existence of the Z(4430) state with a significance of over 13.9 σ.[ 14] [ 15]
In February 2016, the DØ experiment reported evidence of a narrow tetraquark candidate, named X(5568), decaying to B0 s π± .[ 16]
In December 2017, DØ also reported observing the X(5568) using a different B0 s final state.[ 17]
However, it was not observed in searches by the LHCb,[ 18] CMS ,[ 19] CDF ,[ 20] or ATLAS [ 21] experiments.
In June 2016, LHCb announced the discovery of three additional tetraquark candidates, called X(4274), X(4500) and X(4700).[ 22] [ 23] [ 24]
In 2020, LHCb announced the discovery of a
c cc c
tetraquark: X(6900).[ 2] [ 25] In 2022, ATLAS also observed X(6900),[ 26] and in 2023, CMS reported an observation of three such states, X(6600), X(6900), and X(7300).[ 27]
In 2021, LHCb announced the discovery of four additional tetraquarks, including cc us .[ 3]
In 2022, LHCb announced the discovery of cs ud and cs u d.[ 28]
See also
References
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V. M. Abazov; et al. (D0 collaboration ) (2016). "Observation of a new B0 s π± state". Physical Review Letters . 117 (2): 022003. arXiv :1602.07588 . Bibcode :2016PhRvL.117b2003A . doi :10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.022003 . PMID 27447502 . S2CID 7789961 .
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^ Announcement by LHCb
^
R. Aaij; et al. (LHCb collaboration ) (2017). "Observation of J/ψφ structures consistent with exotic states from amplitude analysis of B+ →J/ψφK+ decays". Physical Review Letters . 118 (2): 022003. arXiv :1606.07895 . Bibcode :2017PhRvL.118b2003A . doi :10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.022003 . PMID 28128595 . S2CID 206284149 .
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^ "LHCb discovers three new exotic particles" . CERN . 5 July 2022. Retrieved 8 July 2022 .
External links