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Pentaquark

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Joquarky (talk | contribs) at 02:37, 3 July 2003 (added some details and a reference link to an informative site created by the team partially responsible for discovery). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A pentaquark is a subatomic particle consisting of a group of "five" quarks (compared to three quarks in normal baryons and two in mesons). A pentaquark contains only three countable quarks, since it is composed of four quarks and one anti-quark. It has therefore been assigned a new particle classification, called an exotic baryon. Several experiments have shown that the mass of the pentaquark is about 1540 MeV.

The existence of pentaquarks was originally hypothesized by Maxim Polyakov, Dmitri Diakonov, and Victor Petrov at the Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute in Russia in 1997, but their theory was met with skepticism.

The existence of pentaquarks was proven in July 2003 by experiments run by Takashi Nakano of Osaka University, Japan, and by Ken Hicks at the Jefferson lab in Virginia. Their experiments caused a high-energy gamma ray to interact with a neutron, creating a meson and a pentaquark. However, the pentaquark only survived for about 10e-20 seconds before decaying into a meson and a neutron.

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