- Exotic hadron
Exotic
hadrons aresubatomic particles made ofquarks (and possiblygluons ), but which do not fit into the usual schema of hadrons. While bound by thestrong interaction they are not predicted by the simplequark model . That is, exotic hadrons do not have the same quark content as ordinaryhadron s:exotic baryon s have more than just the three quarks of ordinarybaryon s andexotic meson s do not have one quark and oneantiquark like ordinarymeson s. Exotic hadrons can be searched for by looking for particles withquantum numbers forbidden to ordinary hadrons. Experimental signatures for exotic hadrons have been seen recentlyFact|date=March 2008 but remain a topic of controversy inparticle physics .History
When the quark model was first postulated by
Murray Gell-Mann and others in the 1960s it was to organize the states then in existence in a meanful way. AsQuantum Chromodynamics (QCD) developed over the next decade, however, it became apparent that there was no fundamental reason why only 3-quark and quark-antiquark combinations should exist. In addition it seemed that gluons, the force carrying particles of the strong interaction, should also form bound states by themselves (glueballs ) and with quarks (hybrid hadrons ). Nevertheless, several decades have passed without conclusive evidence of an exotic hadron.Candidates
There are several exotic hadron candidates:
*X(3872) - Discovered by the Belle detector atKEK in Japan, this particle has been variously hypothesized to bediquark or amesonic molecule .
*Y(3940) - This particle fails to fit into theCharmonium spectrum predicted bytheorists .
*Y(4260) - Discovered by the BaBar detector atSLAC inMenlo Park ,California this particle is hypothesized to be made up of a gluon bound to a quark and antiquark.
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