Evidence for intrinsic charm quarks in the proton
Richard D. Ball, Alessandro Candido, Juan Cruz-Martinez, Stefano, Forte, Tommaso Giani, Felix Hekhorn, Kirill Kudashkin, Giacomo Magni, and, Juan Rojo

TL;DR
This paper provides evidence for the existence of intrinsic charm quarks within the proton, using advanced machine learning techniques and experimental data, confirming longstanding theoretical predictions.
Contribution
It offers the first high-confidence evidence for intrinsic charm in the proton, distinguishing it from other charm sources using a novel analysis approach.
Findings
Intrinsic charm exists at 3-sigma confidence level.
The charm distribution matches model predictions.
Confirmed by LHCb Z-boson production data.
Abstract
The theory of the strong force, quantum chromodynamics, describes the proton in terms of quarks and gluons. The proton is a state of two up quarks and one down quark bound by gluons, but quantum theory predicts that in addition there is an infinite number of quark-antiquark pairs. Both light and heavy quarks, whose mass is respectively smaller or bigger than the mass of the proton, are revealed inside the proton in high-energy collisions. However, it is unclear whether heavy quarks also exist as a part of the proton wavefunction, which is determined by non-perturbative dynamics and accordingly unknown: so-called intrinsic heavy quarks. It has been argued for a long time that the proton could have a sizable intrinsic component of the lightest heavy quark, the charm quark. Innumerable efforts to establish intrinsic charm in the proton have remained inconclusive. Here we provide evidence…
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