Composition | Odd number of gluons |
---|---|
Family | Hadrons |
Interactions | Strong |
Symbol | O |
Antiparticle | Self |
Theorized | Basarab Nicolescu and Leszek Łukaszuk (October 1973)[1] |
Discovered | Tamás Csörgő, Tamás Novák, Roman Pasechnik, András Ster and István Szanyi DØ and TOTEM Collaborations[2] |
In particle physics, the odderon corresponds to an elusive family of odd-gluon states, dominated by a three-gluon state. When protons collide elastically with other protons or with anti-protons at high energies, gluons are exchanged. Exchanging an even number of gluons is a crossing-even part of elastic proton–proton and proton–antiproton scattering, while odderon exchange (i.e. exchange of odd number of gluons) corresponds to a crossing-odd term in the elastic scattering amplitude. In turn, the odderon's crossing-odd counterpart is the pomeron.[clarification needed]
It took about 48 years to find a definite signal of odderon exchange.[2]
Abazov Abbott Acharya et al 2021
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).