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Can gluons exist outside of their association with quarks? If so has any experiment shown it and what has it shown?
Gluons cannot exist freely outside their association with quarks due to confinement rules, making them color-charged particles. Experimental evidence indicates that when high-energy particle collisions produce four jets, one of these jets likely originates from a gluon. Theoretical predictions suggest that gluons can form colorless glueballs, which behave similarly to mesons but have specific restrictions, such as being isoscalar and flavor-neutral. The scalar glueball is predicted to occur at approximately 1611 MeV, while the tensor glueball is expected around 2232 MeV, with potential candidates identified in existing meson data.
PREREQUISITESParticle physicists, researchers in quantum chromodynamics, and anyone interested in the properties of gluons and mesons will benefit from this discussion.
Originally posted by mathman
Can gluons exist outside of their association with quarks? If so has any experiment shown it and what has it shown?