English

Multiquark States

High Energy Physics - Phenomenology 2018-07-04 v1

Abstract

Why do we see certain types of strongly interacting elementary particles and not others? This question was posed over 50 years ago in the context of the quark model. M. Gell-Mann and G. Zweig proposed that the known mesons were qqˉq \bar q and baryons qqqqqq, with quarks known at the time uu ("up"), dd ("down"), and ss ("strange") having charges (2/3,-1/3,-1/3). Mesons and baryons would then have integral charges. Mesons such as qqqˉqˉqq \bar q \bar q and baryons such as qqqqqˉqqqq \bar q would also have integral charges. Why weren't they seen? They have now been seen, but only with additional heavy quarks and under conditions which tell us a lot about the strong interactions and how they manifest themselves. The present article describes recent progress in our understanding of such "exotic" mesons and baryons.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1711.10626,
  title  = {Multiquark States},
  author = {Marek Karliner and Jonathan L. Rosner and Tomasz Skwarnicki},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.10626},
  year   = {2018}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T23:00:16.538Z