Non-Standard Heavy Mesons and Baryons, an Experimental Review
Stephen Lars Olsen, Tomasz Skwarnicki, Daria Zieminska

TL;DR
This paper reviews experimental evidence for non-standard heavy mesons and baryons, discussing their properties, how they compare to traditional models, and highlighting the current gaps in understanding complex hadron spectroscopy.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of experimental findings on non-standard heavy hadrons and compares them with theoretical models, emphasizing the need for further research.
Findings
Evidence for non-standard heavy mesons and baryons has been observed.
Measured properties often deviate from standard quark-model predictions.
The spectroscopy of complex hadrons remains poorly understood.
Abstract
Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the generally accepted theory for the strong interactions, describes the interactions between quarks and gluons. The strongly interacting particles that are seen in nature are hadrons, which are composites of quarks and gluons. Since QCD is a strongly coupled theory at distance scales that are characteristic of observable hadrons, there are no rigorous, first-principle methods to derive the spectrum and properties of the hadrons from the QCD Lagrangian, except for Lattice QCD simulations that are not yet able to cope with all aspects of complex and short-lived states. Instead, a variety of "QCD inspired" phenomenological models have been proposed. Common features of these models are predictions for the existence of hadrons with substructures that are more complex than the standard quark-antiquark mesons and the three quark baryons of the original quark…
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