
By The Henryk Niewodniczanski Institute of Nuclear Physics May 17, 2025
Collected at: https://scitechdaily.com/quarks-gone-rogue-flavor-symmetry-break-sparks-physics-shake-up-at-cern/
In high-energy collisions between argon and scandium atomic nuclei, scientists from the international NA61/SHINE experiment have uncovered a striking anomaly. It points to a possible breakdown of one of the most fundamental principles in particle physics: the near-symmetry between up and down quarks, known as flavor symmetry. This unexpected result could reveal gaps in our current models of nuclear collisions—or it might be the first sign of the elusive “new physics” that researchers have been chasing for decades.
Challenging a Fundamental Assumption in Particle Physics
Imagine building something with equal numbers of wooden and plastic blocks. You’d expect the mix to stay the same after taking it apart. Physicists have long believed something similar happens in particle collisions—a kind of balance called flavor symmetry, where particles made of up and down quarks behave predictably, regardless of which quark type is involved.
But a surprising new discovery challenges that assumption. In a paper just published in Nature Communications, researchers from the NA61/SHINE experiment, including a major team from Poland’s Institute of Nuclear Physics (IFJ PAN) in Cracow, reported unusual results from collisions between argon and scandium nuclei. These high-energy collisions were carried out at CERN using the Super Proton Synchrotron, the same accelerator that feeds particles into the famous Large Hadron Collider.
Cracking the Basics: Quarks, Mesons, and Symmetry
“According to the current state of knowledge, the world of matter we perceive is mainly made up of elementary particles called quarks. They come in six types, each having its antimatter counterpart. Protons and neutrons, the basic constituents of atomic nuclei, are composed of triplets of – always mixed – up and down quarks, while quark-antiquark pairs are called mesons,” says Prof. Andrzej Rybicki (IFJ PAN), introducing us to the subject.
These quarks are held together by the strong force, one of the fundamental forces of nature, described by a theory known as quantum chromodynamics. From its equations, it follows that if quarks of all types had the same masses, the strong interaction would not distinguish any of them. In fact, quarks of different varieties (flavors) differ significantly in their masses, which breaks this symmetry. What becomes crucial, however, is that the two lightest types of quarks – the previously mentioned up and down quarks – differ little in their masses.
Strong interactions, therefore, do not treat them in exactly the same manner, but similarly enough to speak of the existence of an approximate flavor symmetry. In nuclear research, the importance of this symmetry is significant. It is what makes it known that if a high-energy collision involving up quarks produces some secondary particles with a given probability, then with almost the same probabilit,y other corresponding secondary particles would be produced in a collision in which down quarks would be present (and vice versa).

A New Experimental Breakthrough With Kaons
The NA61/SHINE experiment team was involved in the study of K mesons (kaons), which appear in various types during high-energy collisions of argon and scandium atomic nuclei. Originally, the group planned to measure only electrically charged kaons. Admittedly, it was known that short-lived neutral kaons, with no electric charge, are also produced in collisions, but measuring them did not seem worthwhile. After all, it was clear from the flavor symmetry that, when negative kaons and positive kaons were added, the result should correspond with the number of neutral kaons to a good approximation. In the end, however, the group decided to carry out measurements of kaons of all types – and this was a great success.
Surprising Results: A 18% Kaon Anomaly
“The results published by our team turn out to be statistically significantly different from previous theoretical predictions. It is usually assumed that discrepancies in experimental data, due to the approximate nature of the flavor symmetry, do not exceed 3% in this energy range. We, on the other hand, report an overproduction of charged kaons reaching as high as 18%!” says Prof. Rybicki.
When looked at more closely, the observed effect becomes even more intriguing. A stable isotope of argon has 18 protons and 22 neutrons, whereas in the case of scandium, there are three more neutrons in a stable nucleus than there are protons. Protons are conglomerates of two up quarks and one down quark, neutrons vice versa, so simple arithmetic proves that there were slightly more down quarks in the systems studied before the collisions.
“Since we started off with more down quarks than up quarks, we would intuitively expect that if there is a disruption of the flavor symmetry, we should observe more down quarks after the collision as a result. Meanwhile, our analyses show unequivocally: the flavor symmetry is disrupted in the other direction and, in the end, it is the up quarks that are more abundant!”, says the initiator of the measurement of neutral kaons, Prof. Katarzyna Grebieszkow from the Warsaw University of Technology.
Implications for the Standard Model – Or Beyond?
The reasons for the observed symmetry breaking in collisions between argon and scandium atomic nuclei are currently unknown. Perhaps the theoretical calculations inspired by quantum chromodynamics have not taken into account some important property of these collisions. However, another, more spectacular possibility cannot be ruled out: that the observed effect goes beyond the existing theory of strong interactions and the Standard Model built with it, which would mean that it is a manifestation of the long-sought-after ‘new physics’.
Regardless of further developments, the discovery already carries significant implications for scientists involved in studies of high-energy collisions between particles and atomic nuclei. Indeed, the assumption of the existence of the symmetry in question has been widely used for decades in modelling the course of many nuclear experiments and interpreting their results.
Rethinking Models of High-Energy Collisions
“The point is that we have discovered flavor symmetry breaking in collisions between atomic nuclei. Today, we are not yet able to say whether this is a universal phenomenon, affecting all interactions with the presence of quarks, or whether it occurs, for example, only for nuclei of specific mass or for some, but not other, collision energies,” stresses Prof. Rybicki and adds: “In practice, this implies the need of a careful re-evaluation of virtually all models of particle production in high-energy collisions, and of numerous experimental results.”
In the coming months, scientists from the NA61/SHINE team will begin work to confirm flavor symmetry breaking in collisions characterized by initially equal numbers of up and down quarks.
Next Steps: New Tests for Symmetry Violation
“The first focus will be on the tens of millions of already recorded collisions of pi+ and pi- mesons with carbon nuclei, where it is possible to speak of full flavor symmetry prior to the collision. The next step will be to study the course of oxygen-oxygen and magnesium-magnesium collisions, with the latter system seeming particularly promising due to the complexity of atomic nuclei similar to argon and scandium, whose collisions made it possible to discover the phenomenon in question,” says Dr. Seweryn Kowalski, professor at the University of Silesia, who – together with Prof. Eric Zimmerman of the University of Colorado Boulder – heads the NA61/SHINE experiment.
Unfortunately, we will still need to wait for the most interesting results: the collisions of magnesium nuclei will only be possible after the soon-to-be-commenced three-year upgrade of the LHC.
Reference: “Evidence of isospin-symmetry violation in high-energy collisions of atomic nuclei” by The NA61/SHINE Collaboration, F. Giacosa, M. Gorenstein, R. Poberezhniuk and S. Samanta, 23 March 2025, Nature Communications.
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57234-6

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