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{{Short description|Hadron outside the ordinary meson and baryon classification}}
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Revision as of 22:02, 20 May 2026



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exotic hadron is a Book II topic in the Quantum Collection. A quantum exotic hadron is a hadronic state that does not fit the simple quark-antiquark meson or three-quark baryon classification. Examples include tetraquark candidates, pentaquark candidates, molecular hadrons, hybrid mesons, and possible glueballs. A quantum exotic hadron is a hadronic state that does not fit the simple quark-antiquark meson or three-quark baryon classification. Examples include tetraquark candidates, pentaquark candidates, molecular hadrons, hybrid mesons, and possible glueballs. Composite hadrons are described by quantum chromodynamics. Their observable properties arise from valence constituents, gluon fields, sea quark-antiquark pairs, orbital motion, and confinement. Hadrons are reconstructed through masses, lifetimes, decay channels, scattering patterns, and production rates. Their spectra and decays provide detailed tests of strong-interaction dynamics.

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Exotic hadron: beyond ordinary mesons and baryons.

Structure

Composite hadrons are described by quantum chromodynamics. Their observable properties arise from valence constituents, gluon fields, sea quark-antiquark pairs, orbital motion, and confinement.[1]

Experimental role

Hadrons are reconstructed through masses, lifetimes, decay channels, scattering patterns, and production rates. Their spectra and decays provide detailed tests of strong-interaction dynamics.[2]

Description

exotic hadron is a matter-scale concept used to organize how quantum theory describes atoms, particles, fields, condensed matter, plasma, or spacetime-related systems. In the Quantum Collection it is placed by scale so the reader can move from materials and molecules down to subatomic degrees of freedom.

Quantum context

At this scale, the relevant behavior is controlled by quantized states, interactions, conservation laws, and the way excitations or particles are observed. The concept is normally linked to measurable properties such as energy, momentum, charge, spin, spectra, scattering rates, or collective modes.

Role in the collection

This page provides a compact reference point for related pages in Book II. It should be read together with nearby matter-scale topics and the corresponding foundations in quantum mechanics.[3]

Interpretation

For exotic hadron, the quantum description is useful because it separates the allowed states, interactions, and measurable quantities from the classical picture. The same concept may appear differently in spectroscopy, scattering, condensed matter, field theory, or cosmology.

Typical measurements involve spectra, decay products, transition rates, transport behavior, correlation functions, or detector signatures. These observations provide the empirical link between the page topic and the wider Quantum Collection.

See also

Table of contents (84 articles)

Index

Full contents

References

  1. Schwartz, Matthew D. (2014). Quantum Field Theory and the Standard Model. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-03473-0. 
  2. "Review of Particle Physics". Physical Review D 110 (3): 030001. 2024. DOI 10.1103/PhysRevD.110.030001. 
  3. "Quantum mechanics". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_mechanics. 


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum exotic hadron