Could the X17 resonance, if it is even real, be an electromagnetically bound light quark-light antiquark meson?
This explanation is much more attractive than a new fundamental particle, as it wouldn't involve beyond the Standard Model physics, and would instead involve a low energy electromagnetically bound up-antiup or down-antidown pair of quarks.
It has to be electromagnetically bound, rather than strong force bound, because a neutral light quark-antiquark pair bound by the strong force, i.e. a neutral pion, has a mass of about 135 MeV, mostly due to the binding energy of the gluons confining them in a hadron.
This said, this theory has a big problem.
Why aren't the light quarks confined in a QCD bound hadronic state?
The only times quarks are not in QCD bound hadronic states that have so far been observed are shortly after top quarks form (because they almost always decay before they can hadronize, although we just learned in 2025 that in rare cases a top anti-top quark pair can form toponium in a QCD bound state the persists very briefly) and in quark-gluon plasma at temperatures corresponding to about 1-2 GeV (i.e. 11-23 trillion Kelvin).
The invariant mass spectrum of e+e− pairs produced in high-energy Pb-emulsion collisions at 160 A GeV at CERN SPS exhibits a complex structure of many resonances resting on top of a broad enhancement at invariant masses below 50 MeV, with the prominent resonance at 19 ±1 MeV providing independent support for the hypothetical X17 particle.
We show that this complex structure may be coherently described as signatures for the neutral color-singlet qq¯ quark matter in both its deconfined and confined phases. That is, the broad enhancement may arise from thermal annihilation of QED(U(1))-deconfined quarks and antiquarks into e+e− pairs at the phase transition temperature Tc(QED), theoretically estimated to be 4.75 ± 1.2 MeV from the transitional equilibrium condition. The observed 3±1 and 7±1 MeV resonances may correspond to the QED(U(1))-deconfined dd¯ and uu¯ Coulomb bound states near their quark rest masses, respectively, whereas the observed 19 ± 1 MeV resonance may correspond to the QED(U(1))-confined isoscalar QED meson.
The approximate agreement between the theoretical and the experimental spectrum suggests that both QED(U(1))-confined and QED(U(1))-deconfined neutral color-singlet qq¯ quark matter may have been produced in these high-energy Pb-emulsion collisions. We propose future experiments to confirm or refute these findings.
Cheuk-Yin Wong, "Possible Evidence for Neutral Color-Singlet qq¯ Quark Matter from High-Energy Pb-Emulsion Collisions" arXiv:2604.23473 (April 25, 2026) (21 pages).
Some conjectures
What would work without breaking the rules of the Standard Model, however, is if the 3 and 7 MeVs were light quark-antiquark pairs that were produced and immediately annihilated before they could hadronize, and if the 19 MeV resonance was an electromagnetically bound positron-electron state (i.e. positronium). Positronium has a ground state mass of 1.022 MeV (twice the 0.511 MeV mass of an electron or positron), however, with excited states varying in mass by single digit eV amounts per state, which wouldn't generate a single resonance at 17-19 MeV.
Another possibility is that the observed 3 ± 1 MeV resonances may correspond to the QED(U(1))-deconfined uu¯ Coulomb bound state near its quark rest masses, that the 7 ± 1 MeV resonances correspond to the QED(U(1))-deconfined dd¯ Coulomb bound state and also to uu¯uu¯ Coulomb bound state near their respective quark rest masses, and that the observed 19 ± 1 MeV resonance may correspond to the QED(U(1))-deconfined dd¯dd¯ Coulomb bound state.
The light quark masses, according to the Particle Data Group (admittedly at the 1-2 GeV energy scale and not the low single digit to tens of MeVs energy scale) is as follows:
The rest mass of four d-quarks is 18.8 MeV, which is right where the resonance is observed.
In this hypothesis, these resonances fail to hadronize because the e+e− pairs that produced one or two light quark-antiquark pairs didn't have enough mass-energy to form a 135 MeV neutral pion, so they instead formed one or two deconfined quark-antiquark pairs that quickly annihilate again because the system had enough energy to create the quarks, but not enough energy to create the bound system of quarks and gluons necessary to form a pion. This has the virtue, again, of not requiring any BSM fundamental particles or new forces.
A four quark solution requires angular momentum that wouldn't normally be present in a simple e+e− pair, but if there were two e+e− pairs in close proximity, both with only modest kinetic energy, which is plausible in the context of the complex overall environment of the high-energy Pb-emulsion collisions generating the data here, or the interactions of the full fledged multi-nucleon atoms present in other contexts where there are claimed sightings of the X17 resonance, a coincidence of two low energy e+e− pairs would be expected with some calculable frequency.
This explanation would still be ground breaking, as it would represent a third circumstance, previously unknown and not predicted, where quarks are (briefly) deconfined. But it would be far less radical than most of the alternative explanations.
