A hypernucleus is similar to a conventional atomic nucleus, but contains at least one hyperon in addition to the normal protons and neutrons. Hyperons are a category of baryon particles that carry non-zero strangeness quantum number, which is conserved by the strong and electromagnetic interactions.
A variety of reactions give access to depositing one or more units of strangeness in a nucleus. Hypernuclei containing the lightest hyperon, the lambda (ÃÂ), tend to be more tightly bound than normal nuclei, though they can decay via the weak force with a mean lifetime of around . Sigma (ã) hypernuclei have been sought, as have doubly-strange nuclei containing xi baryons (ÃÂ) or two ÃÂ's.
Hypernuclei are named in terms of their atomic number and baryon number, as in normal nuclei, plus the hyperon(s) which are listed in a left subscript of the symbol, with the caveat that atomic number is interpreted as the total charge of the hypernucleus, including charged hyperons such as the xi minus (ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup>) as well as protons. For example, the hypernucleus contains 8 protons, 7 neutrons, and one à(which carries no charge).
The first was discovered by Marian Danysz and Jerzy Pniewski in 1952 using a nuclear emulsion plate exposed to cosmic rays, based on their energetic but delayed decay. This event was inferred to be due to a nuclear fragment containing a ÃÂ baryon. Experiments until the 1970s would continue to study hypernuclei produced in emulsions using cosmic rays, and later using pion (ÃÂ) and kaon (K) beams from particle accelerators.
Since the 1980s, more efficient production methods using pion and kaon beams have allowed further investigation at various accelerator facilities, including CERN, Brookhaven National Laboratory, KEK, DAÃÂNE, and JPARC. In the 2010s, heavy ion experiments such as ALICE and STAR first allowed the production and measurement of light hypernuclei formed through hadronization from quarkâÂÂgluon plasma.
Hypernuclear physics differs from that of normal nuclei because a hyperon is distinguishable from the four nucleon spin and isospin. That is, a single hyperon is not restricted by the Pauli exclusion principle, and can sink to the lowest energy level. As such, hypernuclei are often smaller and more tightly bound than normal nuclei; for example, the lithium hypernucleus is 19% smaller than the normal nucleus <sup>6</sup>Li. However, the hyperons can decay via the weak force; the mean lifetime of a free ÃÂ is , and that of a ÃÂ hypernucleus is usually slightly shorter.
A generalized mass formula developed for both the non-strange normal nuclei and strange hypernuclei can estimate masses of hypernuclei containing ÃÂ, ÃÂÃÂ, ã, and àhyperon(s). The neutron and proton driplines for hypernuclei are predicted and existence of some exotic hypernuclei beyond the normal neutron and proton driplines are suggested. This generalized mass formula was named the "Samanta formula" by Botvina and Pochodzalla and used to predict relative yields of hypernuclei in heavy-ion collisions.
The simplest, and most well understood, type of hypernucleus includes only the lightest hyperon, the ÃÂ.
While two nucleons can interact through the nuclear force mediated by a virtual pion, the àbecomes a ã baryon upon emitting a pion, so the ÃÂâÂÂnucleon interaction is mediated solely by more massive mesons such as the ÷ and àmesons, or through the simultaneous exchange of two or more mesons. This means that the ÃÂâÂÂnucleon interaction is weaker and has a shorter range than the standard nuclear force, and the potential well of a àin the nucleus is shallower than that of a nucleon; in hypernuclei, the depth of the àpotential is approximately 30 MeV. However, one-pion exchange in the ÃÂâÂÂnucleon interaction does cause quantum-mechanical mixing of the àand ã baryons in hypernuclei (which does not happen in free space), especially in neutron-rich hypernuclei. Additionally, the three-body force between a àand two nucleons is expected to be more important than the three-body interaction in nuclei, since the àcan exchange two pions with a virtual ã intermediate, while the equivalent process in nucleons requires a relatively heavy delta baryon (ÃÂ) intermediate.
Like all hyperons, àhypernuclei can decay through the weak interaction, which changes it to a lighter baryon and emits a meson or a leptonâÂÂantilepton pair. In free space, the àusually decays via the weak force to a proton and a ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup> meson, or a neutron and a ÃÂ<sup>0</sup>, with a total half-life of . A nucleon in the hypernucleus can cause the àto decay via the weak force without emitting a pion; this process becomes dominant in heavy hypernuclei, due to suppression of the pion-emitting decay mode. The half-life of the àin a hypernucleus is considerably shorter, plateauing to about near , but some empirical measurements substantially disagree with each other or with theoretical predictions.
The simplest hypernucleus is the hypertriton (), which consists of one proton, one neutron, and one ÃÂ hyperon. The ÃÂ in this system is very loosely bound, having a separation energy of 130 keV and a large radius of 10.6 fm, compared to about for the deuteron.
This loose binding would imply a lifetime similar to a free ÃÂ. However, the measured hypertriton lifetime averaged across all experiments (about ) is substantially shorter than predicted by theory, as the non-mesonic decay mode is expected to be relatively minor; some experimental results are substantially shorter or longer than this average.
The existence of hypernuclei containing a ã baryon is less clear. Several experiments in the early 1980s reported bound hypernuclear states above the àseparation energy and presumed to contain one of the slightly heavier ã baryons, but experiments later in the decade ruled out the existence of such states. Results from exotic atoms containing a ã<sup>âÂÂ</sup> bound to a nucleus by the electromagnetic force have found a net repulsive ãâÂÂnucleon interaction in medium-sized and large hypernuclei, which means that no ã hypernuclei exist in such mass range. However, an experiment in 1998 definitively observed the light ã hypernucleus .
Hypernuclei containing two àbaryons have been made. However, such hypernuclei are much harder to produce due to containing two strange quarks and, as of 2016, only seven candidate ÃÂàhypernuclei have been observed. Like the ÃÂâÂÂnucleon interaction, empirical and theoretical models predict that the ÃÂâÂÂàinteraction is mildly attractive.
Hypernuclei containing a àbaryon are known. Empirical studies and theoretical models indicate that the ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup>âÂÂproton interaction is attractive, but weaker than the ÃÂâÂÂnucleon interaction. Like the ã<sup>âÂÂ</sup> and other negatively charged particles, the ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup> can also form an exotic atom. When a ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup> is bound in an exotic atom or a hypernucleus, it quickly decays to a ÃÂàhypernucleus or to two àhypernuclei by exchanging a strange quark with a proton, which releases about 29 MeV of energy in free space:
Hypernuclei containing the omega baryon (é) were predicted using lattice QCD in 2018; in particular, the protonâÂÂé and éâÂÂé dibaryons (bound systems containing two baryons) are expected to be stable. , no such hypernuclei have been observed under any conditions, but the lightest such species could be produced in heavy-ion collisions, and measurements by the STAR experiment are consistent with the existence of the protonâÂÂé dibaryon.
Since the ÃÂ is electrically neutral and its nuclear force interactions are attractive, there are predicted to be arbitrarily large hypernuclei with high strangeness and small net charge, including species with no nucleons. Binding energy per baryon in multi-strange hypernuclei can reach up to 21 MeV/A under certain conditions, compared to 8.80 MeV/A for the ordinary nucleus <sup>62</sup>Ni. Additionally, formation of ÃÂ baryons should quickly become energetically favorable, unlike when there are no ÃÂ's, because the exchange of strangeness with a nucleon would be impossible due to the Pauli exclusion principle.
Several modes of production have been devised to make hypernuclei through bombardment of normal nuclei.
One method of producing a K<sup>âÂÂ</sup> meson exchanges a strange quark with a nucleon and changes it to a ÃÂ:
The cross section for the formation of a hypernucleus is maximized when the momentum of the kaon beam is approximately 500 MeV/c. Several variants of this setup exist, including ones where the incident kaons are either brought to rest before colliding with a nucleus.
In rare cases, the incoming K<sup>âÂÂ</sup> can instead produce a àhypernucleus via the reaction:
The equivalent strangeness production reaction involves a ÃÂ<sup>+</sup> meson reacts with a neutron to change it to a ÃÂ:
This reaction has a maximum cross section at a beam momentum of 1.05 GeV/c, and is the most efficient production route for ÃÂ hypernuclei, but requires larger targets than strangeness exchange methods.
Electron scattering off of a proton can change it to a ÃÂ and produce a K<sup>+</sup>:
where the prime symbol denotes a scattered electron. The energy of an electron beam can be more easily tuned than pion or kaon beams, making it easier to measure and calibrate hypernuclear energy levels. Initially theoretically predicted in the 1980s, this method was first used experimentally in the early 2000s.
The capture of a ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup> baryon by a nucleus can make a ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup> exotic atom or hypernucleus. Upon capture, it changes to a ÃÂàhypernucleus or two àhypernuclei. The disadvantage is that the ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup> baryon is harder to make into a beam than singly strange hadrons. However, an experiment at J-PARC begun in 2020 will compile data on àand ÃÂàhypernuclei using a similar, non-beam setup where scattered ÃÂ<sup>âÂÂ</sup> baryons rain onto an emulsion target.
The K<sup>âÂÂ</sup> meson can orbit a nucleus in an exotic atom, such as in kaonic hydrogen. Although the K<sup>âÂÂ</sup>-proton strong interaction in kaonic hydrogen is repulsive, the K<sup>âÂÂ</sup>âÂÂnucleus interaction is attractive for larger systems, so this meson can enter a strongly bound state closely related to a hypernucleus; in particular, the K<sup>âÂÂ</sup>âÂÂprotonâÂÂproton system is experimentally known and more tightly bound than a normal nucleus.
Nuclei containing a charm quark have been predicted theoretically since 1977, and are described as charmed hypernuclei despite the possible absence of strange quarks. In particular, the lightest charmed baryons, the ÃÂ<sub>c</sub> and ã<sub>c</sub> baryons, are predicted to exist in bound states in charmed hypernuclei, and could be created in processes analogous to those used to make hypernuclei. The depth of the ÃÂ<sub>c</sub> potential in nuclear matter is predicted to be 58 MeV, but unlike àhypernuclei, larger hypernuclei containing the positively charged ÃÂ<sub>c</sub> would be less stable than the corresponding àhypernuclei due to Coulomb repulsion. The mass difference between the ÃÂ<sub>c</sub> and the is too large for appreciable mixing of these baryons to occur in hypernuclei. Weak decays of charmed hypernuclei have strong relativistic corrections compared to those in ordinary hypernuclei, as the energy released in the decay process is comparable to the mass of the àbaryon.
In August 2024 the STAR Collaboration reported the observation of the heaviest antimatter nucleus known, antihyperhydrogen-4 consisting of one antiproton, two antineutrons and an antihyperon.
The anti-lambda hyperon and the antihypertriton have also been previously observed.