The eta was discovered in pion–nucleon collisions at the Bevatron in 1961 by A. Pevsner et al. at a time when the proposal of the Eightfold Way was leading to predictions and discoveries of new particles from symmetry considerations. The difference between the mass of the and that of the is larger than the quark model can naturally explain. This “ η–η′ puzzle ” can be resolved by the 't Hooftinstanton mechanism, whose realization is also known as the Witten–Veneziano mechanism. Specifically, in QCD, the higher mass of the is very significant, since it is associated with the axial U classical symmetry, which is explicitly broken through the chiral anomaly upon quantization; thus, although the “protected” mass is small, the is not.
Quark composition
The particles belong to the "pseudo-scalar" nonet of mesons which have spin and negative parity, and and have zero total isospin, I, and zero strangeness and hypercharge. Each quark which appears in an particle is accompanied by its antiquark and all the main quantum numbers are zero. The basic SU symmetry theory of quarks for the three lightest quarks, which only takes into account the strong force, predicts corresponding particles and The subscripts refer to the fact that η1belongs to a singlet and η8 is part of an octet. However, the weak and electromagnetic forces – which can transform one flavour of quark into another – cause a significant though small amount of "mixing" of the eigenstates, so that the actual quark composition is a linear combination of these formulae. That is: The unsubscripted name refers to the real particle which is actually observed and which is close to the η8. The is the observed particle close to η1. The and particles are closely related to the better-known neutral pion, where In fact,, η1 and η8 are three mutually orthogonal linear combinations of the quark pairs, and ; they are at the centre of the pseudo-scalar nonet of mesons with all the main quantum numbers equal to zero.
η′ meson
The η′ meson is a flavor SU singlet, unlike the. It is a different superposition of the same quarks as the eta meson, as described above, and it has a higher mass, a different decay state, and a shorter lifetime. Fundamentally, it results from the direct sum decomposition of the approximate SU flavor symmetry among the 3 lightest quarks,, where 1 corresponds to η1 before slight quark mixing yields.