GGI Lectures on Exotic Hadrons
Luciano Maiani, Alessandro Pilloni

TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical development and recent discoveries of exotic hadrons, such as tetraquarks and pentaquarks, highlighting their significance in advancing hadron spectroscopy.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of theoretical models and experimental evidence for exotic hadrons, emphasizing their role in expanding the understanding of hadronic matter.
Findings
Discovery of numerous exotic hadrons beyond traditional quark models
Support for tetraquark and hadron molecule interpretations
Experimental confirmation of states like X(3872)
Abstract
It is well known that M. Gell-Mann, introducing quarks in 1964 to describe the known mesons and baryons, hinted at the existence of further mesons (tetraquarks) and baryons (pentaquarks). In 1977, R. Jaffe proposed a model of the lightest scalar mesons as diquark-antidiquark pairs and A. de Rujula, H. Georgi and S. Glashow coined the term hadron molecules, to describe possible hadrons made by meson-antimeson pairs bound by the familiar nuclear forces, also an overall tetraquark system. The two alternative pictures have been employed to interpret the unexpected hadron discovered by Belle in 2003, the , confirmed by BaBar and seen in many other High Energy experiments. Since then, a wealth of Exotic Hadrons have been discovered, mesons and baryons that cannot be described by the classical Gell-Mann, and , configurations, opening a new…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions
