Read your links ...Further searches gave me A power house!
http://cosmo.nyu.edu/glennys_farrar.html
Farrar and grad student G. Zaharijas have shown that the baryon asymmetry of the universe may be only an asymmetry in "packaging", with the baryon number in nucleons balanced by anti-baryonic dark matter. Observational constraints on such DM have been obtained and are found to be consistent with the expected DM properties. In one such scenario the DM consists of H and anti-H dibaryons, impelling a renewed study of a long-lived H dibaryon.
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http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0303/0303047v1.pdf
Transitions of two baryons to the H dibaryon in nuclei
Glennys R. Farrar and Gabrijela Zaharijas
05 march 2003
I. INTRODUCTION
The H dibaryon corresponds to the most symmetric color-spin representation of six quarks (uuddss). It is a flavor singlet state with charge 0, strangeness -2 and spin-isospin-parity I(JP ) = 0(0+). The existence of the H was predicted by Jaffe in 1977 [1] in the framework of the quark-bag model. Its mass was originally estimated to be around 2150 MeV, making it stable toward strong decay to two _ particles. Since then, there have been many theoretical efforts to determine its mass and production cross section and, on the experimental side, many inconclusive or unsuccessful attempts to produce and detect it.
There are a number or possible reactions by which two nucleons can convert to an H in a nucleus. The initial state is most likely to be pn or nn in a relative s-wave, because in other cases the Coulomb barrier or relative orbital angular momentum suppresses the overlap of the nucleons at short distances which is necessary to produce the H.
Note that the H does not bind to nuclei[15]; it simply recoils with some momentum imparted in its production.
There are five experiments which have reported positive results in the search for single _ decays from double _ hypernuclei.
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http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0508/0508150v1.pdf
Flavor-singlet hybrid baryons may already have been discovered
Olaf Kittel
Glennys R. Farrar
12 Aug 2005
The hybrid ansatz suggests, but does not predict, that the H-dibaryon mass may be as low as 1.5 GeV.
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Has anyone got anything newer or informative?