One of the long standing mysteries in high energy physics is determining the internal structure of scalar mesons such as the a(0)(980) meson, and they aren't easily explained with a quark-antiquark model (apart from distinctive quarkonium cases, where the quark and antiquark are quarks of the same flavor, like a charm quark- anticharm quark meson).
The symbols "a" (isospin 1) and "f" or "f'" (isospin 0) apply to mesons with ground state JPC quantum numbers 0++ which are also known as (true) scalar mesons.
A new paper concludes with convincing reasoning that the a(0)(980) meson, a scalar meson, is a tetraquark. A key part of the abstract to the paper explains that:
The predicted branching fractions in theqq¯ model ofa0(980) are too small by one to two orders of magnitude compared to experiment as the amplitude is suppressed by the smallness of thea0(980)+ decay constant, while those forD+→a0(980)0P andD0→a0(980)−P are usually too large. These discrepancies can be resolved provided thata0(980) is a tetraquark state.
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