Introduction
Gell-Mann and Zweig introduced the quark model to classify the hadrons discovered thus far [1, 2]. Mesons and baryons were successfully classified as being composed of
Studying how colorful quarks and gluons are grouped inside hadrons is crucial for gaining new insights into the mechanisms of color confinement. Therefore, there have been decades of efforts to search for hadrons with distinct exotic characteristics in experiments, including e+e- annihilations, hadron collisions, and electron–ion collisions. Owing to the high statistics of new generations of experiments, many new hadron resonances have been discovered since 2003, with properties at odds with the quark expectations of ordinary mesons and baryons. These are good candidates for exotic hadrons. Most of them are mesonic states observed in the heavy quarkonium mass region and are typically collectively referred to as XYZ states.
These exotic hadron candidates have been sought and measured in various experiments. Because QCD is intrinsically nonperturbative at low energies, it has been challenging to order these experimental observations to gain deeper insights. Various theoretical methods have been used, including lattice QCD, effective field theories, (unquenched) quark models, and QCD sum rules. Each method has its own advantages and drawbacks. Thus far, a universal description of all these exotic hadron candidates is still out of reach. For examples of recent reviews of the experimental observations and theoretical investigations, see Refs. [6-15].
Here, we focus on the experimental observations of exotic hadrons in pp,
Multiquark candidates with hidden charm and double charm
Above the open-charm threshold, tens of unexpected states with properties that are inconsistent with the expectations of the traditional quark model have been observed since 2003. A few similar states were also observed in the bottomonium mass region. Among these, the Y(mass) states have vector quantum numbers and exhibit strong coupling with the hidden-charm or open-charm final states. The multiquark candidates, including tetraquark ZQ(mass) and pentaquark PQ(mass) with a hidden
The first hidden-charm state that triggered studies of exotic states was X(3872), also known as
Charmonium-like states
X(3872) was discovered by Belle in
The most salient feature of X(3872) is that its mass almost exactly coincides with the threshold of
Using the Flatté parameterization that considers the nearby
Although X(3872) was discovered more than 20 years ago, its internal structure remains unclear. The measurement of the absolute branching fraction
Because the X(3872) mass is so close to the
Another physical quantity under active discussion is the ratio of the partial radiative decay widths to the ψ(2S)γ and
The first vector charmonium-like state Y(4260) was observed by BaBar through the initial state radiation (ISR) process
Although signals of Zc(3900) have been reported in
Hidden-charm pentaquark and double open-charm tetraquark
The search for pentaquark states has a long history. The first strong experimental evidence of a pentaquark state, referred to as
In 2015, LHCb reported the discovery of hidden-charm pentaquark candidates in
As the valence structure of
Two pentaquark candidates with strangeness, Pcs(4459)0 and Pcs(4338)0, were also observed in the
Among exotic hadrons, there is a class of hadrons that is particularly interesting: double-charm tetraquarks. Such hadrons have been discussed since the 1980s (see Ref. [59] for early treatment using the Born–Oppenheimer approximation). The first open-charm tetraquark, Tcc(3875)+, comprising
Production in nuclear collisions
Existing and future experiments
The high-energy collision of heavy ions is a powerful method for generating extremely hot and dense nuclear matter, often referred to as quark–gluon plasma (QGP) [62-64], which exhibits an energy density comparable to that of the Universe a few microseconds after the Big Bang, with roughly equal numbers of quarks and antiquarks. The extreme energy density of the QGP phase leads to the creation of many strange–antistrange quark pairs from quantum vacuum. As the QGP cools, it transits into hadron gas, resulting in the formation of various baryons, mesons, and their antiparticles. Therefore, these collisions offer a unique opportunity to explore exotic particles such as antimatter, hypernuclei [65-72], and exotic hadrons [73], thereby uncovering important fundamental interactions.
While nuclei are abundant across the universe, antinuclei heavier than the antiproton have only been observed as products of relativistic HICs at facilities such as the BNL Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC) and the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). In these experiments, the time projection chamber (TPC) positioned within a solenoidal magnetic field plays a crucial role in identifying the particles of interest by measuring the mean energy loss per unit track length,
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Hypernuclei are the bound states of nucleons and hyperons and offer valuable insights into hyperon-nucleon interactions. While nucleons (protons and neutrons) are composed solely of up and down quarks, hyperons are light-flavored baryons that contain at least one strange quark. A hypernucleus is defined as a nucleus that contains at least one hyperon in addition to nucleons. Despite being bound within hypernuclei, all hyperons are inherently unstable because they decay via weak interactions. The simplest bound hypernucleus is the hypertriton (
The most precise measurements of the
Recently, STAR reported the observation of an antimatter hypernucleus,
Various production yield ratios among (anti)hypernuclei (including hypernuclei and/or antihypernuclei) and (anti)nuclei (including nuclei and/or antinuclei) were assessed and compared with the theoretical models, offering insights into their production mechanisms. As shown in Fig. 3, the antimatter-over-matter particle yield ratios are below unity because the colliding heavy ions carry positive baryon numbers; consequently, the collision system has a positive baryon chemical potential. The data are consistent with most existing measurements within their uncertainties and with the expectation of the coalescence picture of the (anti)nucleus and (anti)hypernucleus production and statistical thermal model [71]. Relationships between the production yield ratios
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High-energy pp collisions and HICs provide excellent laboratories for exploring multistrange dibaryons [78-82]. In the search for a possible ΛΛ bound state, known as the H-dibaryon, femtoscopic correlations of ΛΛ pairs have been studied in pp, Au+Au, and pPb collisions [83, 84]. By comparing the measured data with model calculations, the scattering parameter space, which is characterized by the inverse scattering length and effective range, is constrained. The data revealed a shallow attractive interaction, which is consistent with the findings of hypernuclei studies and lattice computations.
In addition to antimatter and hypernuclei, HICs also serve as a laboratory for studying hidden-charm XYZ particles. The first evidence of
Another common observable in the interaction of quarkonium states with the medium created in HICs is the nuclear modification factor
As reported in Ref. [90], LHCb measured the production of an exotic hadron
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LHCb also measured the feed-down fractions of
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The LHC detectors have also observed
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Production in pp/p pbar collisions
Exotic hadrons with heavy quarks
Exotic hadrons can be produced in
Shortly after the discovery of X(3872) in B decays by the Belle Collaboration [16], the CDF and D0 Collaborations reported the observation of X(3872) in
Using CDF measurements of the yields of X(3872) [99] and ψ(2S) [100], the prompt production rate of X(3872) in
The estimate of
We now argue that the inverse of the force range for the
To demonstrate that the choice of
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This can be understood by considering the diagram corresponding to the second line of Eq. (4), as shown in Fig. 9 (a).3 Because the charmed meson pair is produced during high-energy collisions with all the particles produced in association with X(3872) assumed to be spectators, the production of
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The static properties of X(3872), such as the mass and JPC quantum numbers, can be understood through the
Another method to make the entire production amplitude cutoff independent is to consider the factorization formula, as discussed in Ref. [115]. The production of X(3872), or more generally, hadronic molecules, contains both long-distance and short-distance parts. The long-distance part has a typical momentum scale of the X(3872) binding momentum and is given by the coupling of X(3872) to
In Refs. [121, 104], the authors performed order-of-magnitude estimates of the cross-sections for prompt production in
X(3872) is a hidden-flavor exotic hadron, The dominant component of its wave function for describing its static properties is not necessarily its lowest Fock space components (
With the same reasoning, because f0(980) is also a hidden-flavor meson, the lack of observation of an enhancement of the pT-differential
As discussed in Sect. 3.1, the LHCb measured the production of X(3872) and ψ(2S) as functions of the charged-particle multiplicity in pp collisions at 8 TeV [98]. The measured ratio of the yields of X(3872) to ψ(2S) in the
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Light-flavor hadron production
In previous discussions, exotic hadronic states such as charm and beauty quarks were primarily examined within systems featuring heavy-flavor quarks. There are also many hadronic states in the light-flavor sector with properties that do not align with traditional quark model predictions. For example, the mass of Λ(1405) is lower than that of non-strange N(1535) with the same JP quantum numbers, even though Λ(1405) contains a heavier s quark from the perspective of the three-quark baryon model. In the 1950s, Λ(1405) was predicted as a bound state of
It is also important to investigate the possible dibaryon states to better understand baryon interactions beyond protons and neutrons. To date, the only well-established dibaryon molecular state is the deuteron state, whereas the internal structure of another candidate, d*(2380) [136], discovered over a decade ago, remains unclear. A common explanation for this is that d*(2380) is a double-Δ state [137-139]. A resonance peak was recently observed below the threshold in the
In low-to-moderate energy pp and
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The search for baryon excited states relies primarily on different final state combinations. By applying selection rules based on isospin conservation, regions with significant contributions from certain particles can be identified for further study. For example, in the
pp and pd collisions offer good locations to search for dibaryon states. In reactions with either single-pion or double-pion production or with KΛ/K∑ in the final states, apart from the threshold cusp effect in K∑, no dibaryon states were observed [151] until 2014 when the Wide Angle Shower Apparatus (WASA) experiment at the Cooler Synchrotron (COSY) established a narrow resonant structure d* in the
To produce excited meson states in the low-energy region, the contribution presented in the diagram in Fig. 11 (c) in exchanging two particles is expected to be smaller than that in the other two diagrams. However, in the high-energy region, the intermediate exchanged meson can be replaced by a pomeron, and the fusion of the two exchanged pomerons to produce mesons plays a crucial role in producing double-pion and double-kaon resonant particles through diffraction processes [161, 162]. Owing to its gluon-rich environment, this reaction is often used to search for another type of exotic state, that is, glueballs, in high-energy pp or
Finally, note that considering only the tree diagram mechanisms in Fig. 11 to estimate the production of light hadrons in pp collisions offers a rough approximation. The loop contributions in hadronic reactions are often crucial. For reactions with multiple hadrons in the final state, the final-state interactions and coupled-channel effects may be crucial and can significantly affect the extraction of resonance properties. Therefore, it is essential to use comprehensive coupled-channel models for few-body systems and a combined analysis of various related reactions to extract the resonance poles. Relevant efforts have been made in, for example, the Jülich-Bonn model [166], Argonne–Osaka model [167], and three-body unitary models [168, 169]. However, such models must include many parameters, and obtaining convincingly determined model parameters requires a significant amount of experimental input. Therefore, additional experimental data are required.
Production in heavy-ion collisions
In this subsection, we briefly review recent studies on the production of X(3872) and
As discussed in Sect. 3.1, the only reported signal of prompt X(3872) production in HICs originated from the CMS collaboration [85]. The yields, evolution, and distributions of X(3872) as well as those of other exotic hadrons produced in HICs are complicated by the surrounding QCD medium/nuclear matter/pion gas.
Various coalescence models [73, 173-175] and statistical hadronization models (SHMs) [176] have been used to estimate the yields of X(3872) in hadronic molecular and compact tetraquark pictures. The former depend on a suitable wave function in the coordinate space to encode structural information (for discussions on the subtlety of the short-distance part, see Sect. 3.2.1). In the instantaneous coalescence model, there are still several unclear parameters, such as the volume size at which coalescence occurs, available light quark number at the hadronization temperature, and oscillator frequency of the Wigner function. The SHM assumes that hadrons are in thermal and chemical equilibrium, that is, with a charm-quark fugacity factor to ensure charm-quark conservation. The yield of X(3872) in this model depends only on its mass and not on its internal structure.
In Ref. [73], the authors used both coalescence and statistical models to estimate the yields of various hadrons at the RHIC, and the model results are summarized in Fig. 12. As shown in the figure, compared to the yield of normal hadrons, that of a compact tetraquark is typically one order of magnitude smaller, and that of a hadronic molecule is a factor of two or more. However, the coalescence model considered does not include the evolution effect in the medium, and the statistical model depends only on the masses of the hadrons instead of their internal structures.
Further information to deepen our understanding of the nature of exotic hadrons includes information on their various distributions, such as, the centrality, rapidity, and transverse momentum distributions. As reported in Ref. [175], a multiphase transport model was used to estimate the yield of X(3872) in Pb-Pb collisions at
When the wave function among the constituents is considered, for example, the Wigner function described in Ref. [178], the coalescence probability decreases owing to the strict constraints on the relative momentum between constituents, despite the large geometric size of hadronic molecules [178]. In this case, Ref. [178] showed that the total yield of a compact tetraquark X(3872) is several times larger than that of the molecular picture for Pb-Pb collisions. Simultaneously, the effect of fireball volume on centrality dependence in the molecular picture is not as significant as that described in Ref. [175]. In addition to the distribution of X(3872), the evolution of charm quarks in QGP was also explored in Ref. [178] using the Langevin equation. The yields in both scenarios decreased with evolution time. The same method has been applied to a double-charm tetraquark state [179].
There was also an early study [180] based on the SU(4) effective Lagrangians that considered the evolution of X(3872) by calculating the corresponding production and absorption cross-sections to estimate the hadronic effects on the X(3872) meson abundance in HICs. The absorption cross-sections of the X(3872) meson by pions and ρ mesons during the hadronic stage of HICs were evaluated. They estimated the yield of X(3872) in HICs using both the statistical and coalescence models. They found that the absorption cross-section was two orders of magnitude larger than the production cross-section, and the time evolution of X(3872) abundance in the HICs was stable (see Fig. 14), which is in contrast to the conclusions of Ref. [178].
The production of X(3872) in HICs is due to a large number of heavy quarks, as many as 20
In Ref. [184], a transport calculation of X(3872) through the fireball formed during Pb-Pb collisions at
In Ref. [185], the authors studied the properties of X(3872) in a hot-pion bath based on its molecular picture. They found that its width became a few tens of MeV at temperatures of
Recently, a more rigorous treatment of the thermal corrections from the hot pion gas to the propagator of a loosely bound charm-meson molecule was presented using a zero-range effective field theory (ZREFT) [186]. One might simply expect that ZREFT cannot be applied at a high temperature, which is characterized by the kinetic freeze-out temperature and is orders of magnitude larger than the binding energy of a loosely bound state. Fortunately, the authors of Ref. [186] illustrated that ZREFT can be applied to such a system by first integrating out thermal pions, leaving the ZREFT parameters temperature-dependent. The only correction to the binding energy is a small temperature-dependent correction to the complex binding momentum. It is noticed that the thermal corrections to the binding energy of the molecule only appear at the next-to-leading order, and the results are shown by Fig. 15. These results indicate that loosely bound molecules, such as X(3872) and
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Very recently, in Ref. [187], the authors proposed that the production rate of a loosely bound hadronic molecule, such as X(3872), in HICs can be expressed in terms of the short-distance contact density at the kinetic freeze-out of the hadron gas, which approaches a nonvanishing limit as the binding energy decreases to 0.
Because both X(3872) and ψ(2S) can be reconstructed in the
Similarly, Ref. [189] presents a phenomenological model for the partonic medium attenuation effects on X(3872) and ψ(2S) production in both pp and Pb-Pb collisions. A medium-assisted enhancement effect was proposed for X(3872) production, which was argued to be dominant at high parton densities and large medium sizes. Its competition with the absorption-induced suppression leads to a specific pattern of the
In addition to the measurements of the centrality, transverse momentum, and rapidity distributions of exotic hadrons discussed in the previous subsection, an additional important observable that has recently received intensive interest is the momentum correlation between two hadrons. Because the correlation function contains information about the hadron–hadron final state interaction, exotic hadrons that couple to these two hadrons can be studied.
The momentum correlation function can be expressed in terms of the single-particle emission function
Summary and Outlook
Exotic hadrons remain a vibrant area of research, with significant contributions from various experiments, including Belle, BaBar, BESIII, LHC experiments, and RHIC. These experiments provide a broad and detailed understanding of exotic states, pushing the boundaries of our knowledge of QCD and its strong interactions. Herein, we present a concise review of the studies on exotic hadrons in
Finally, let us mention that the structure of exotic hadrons must be understood using a combination of different reactions that provide supplementary information. In addition to the nuclear collisions reviewed here, e+e- collisions, b-flavored hadron decays, and photoproduction also play unique roles in the study of exotic hadrons. For example, X(3872)γ [195] and Zc(3900) [44, 43] were observed in e+e- collisions only within a specific range of energies around the mass of ψ(4230). This feature suggests that the production mechanism for these states is due to charmed-meson intermediate states that couple strongly to these exotic particles, thus providing invaluable input for understanding them.
Future upgrades to currently running experiments and ongoing research using various reactions promise further discoveries and insights into the nature of exotic hadrons.
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The charge conjugated component “c.c.” will be neglected hereafter for simplicity.
Although, for simplicity, we only spell out the
Here, the charmed meson pair can be both the neutral
This was obtained using
measured by the CMS in the kinematic region 10<pT<30 GeV and |y|<1.2, where pT and y are the transverse momentum and rapidity of X(3872), respectively, [97].