An international team of physicists says the discovery of an electrically charged subatomic particle called Zc(4020) is a sign that they have begun to unveil a whole new family of four-quark objects.
The Beijing Spectrometer (BESIII) collaboration previously announced the discovery of a mysterious four-quark particle called Zc(3900) in April 2013.
A quark is an elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter. Quarks combine to form composite particles called hadrons, the most stable of which are protons and neutrons, the components of atomic nuclei.
More From This Section
"The unique data sample collected by the BESIII collaboration has continued to yield a stream of clues about the nature of multi-quark objects," said Harris, spokesman for the BESIII experiment.
The recent breakthroughs by the BESIII collaboration have come about through a dedicated study of the byproducts of the anomalous Y(4260) particle.
Using the Beijing Electron Positron Collider (BEPCII) in China, scientists tuned the energy at which electrons and positrons annihilate matter to 4260 MeV, which corresponds to the mass of the Y(4260) particle.
The BESIII Collaboration used this method to directly produce and collect large samples of the particle's byproducts, or decays.
This experimental method allowed the BESIII collaboration to first observe the Zc(3900) and then the Zc(4020).
Also recently spotted in the decays is the electrically neutral X(3872), a particle that has been experimentally established for more than 10 years, and has long been suspected to be a four-quark object.
"The year 2013 has so far been an exciting one for the BESIII experiment," Harris said.
"Using decays of the Y(4260), a family of four-quark objects has begun to appear. While the theoretical picture remains to be finalised, more and more clues are suggesting that we are witnessing new forms of matter. And while a new 'zoo' of mysterious particles is emerging, it seems a new classification system may soon be at hand to understand it," said Harris.