Nearly every object we interact with in our lives has a mass, but where does this mass come from? Modern physics says matter acquires its mass from interaction with a physical vacuum—it is not an empty space, but contains a complex structure. Investigating the system of a meson—a composite particle made of a quark, an elementary particle, and its anti-matter, anti-quark—bound to an atomic nucleus, a mesic nucleus, provides precious insight into the vacuum structure, or mass generation mechanism. Scientists are now one step closer to further understanding the origin of mass thanks to new experimental results on a completely new type of mesic nucleus.
The researchers, as part of a major international collaboration, have reported evidence hinting at the existence of a never-before-seen but predicted exotic bound state known as an η′-mesic nucleus. The findings are published in Physical Review Letters.
Physicists have theorized that under certain conditions, short-lived particles called mesons—which only exist for less than a ten-millionth of a second—can become temporarily trapped inside a nucleus, forming an exotic bound system. Measuring mesic nuclei could help scientists understand how the strong nuclear force, which binds atomic nuclei together, behaves and how the vacuum structure changes in extremely high-density environments.









