Physicists discover new, exotic flavor of tetraquark

The particle is made of 4 charm quarks.

Illustration of a tetraquark composed of two charm quarks and two charm antiquarks, detected for the first time inside CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
Illustration of a tetraquark composed of two charm quarks and two charm antiquarks, detected for the first time inside CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
(Image credit: CERN)

The LHCb collaboration at CERN has announced the discovery of a new exotic particle: a so-called "tetraquark." The paper by more than 800 authors is yet to be evaluated by other scientists in a process called "peer review," but has been presented at a seminar. It also meets the usual statistical threshold for claiming the discovery of a new particle.

The finding marks a major breakthrough in a search of almost 20 years, carried out in particle physics labs all over the world.

Lorenzo Capriotti
Research fellow in Particle Physics, Università di Bologna

Lorenzo Capriotti is an experimental particle physicist at the University of Bologna in Italy and the Italian Institute for Nuclear Physics (INFN). Lorenzo has been part of the LHCb collaboration at CERN since 2012. Lorenzo received a master’s degree in particle physics from Sapienza Università di Roma, and a doctorate in particle physics from the University of Manchester in the U.K.