A strongly interacting particle that is made up of a quark/antiquark pair and has an even integer spin.
All mesons are hadrons, and every meson has a corresponding antimeson. Mesons were first
considered by Yukawa
This hypothetical intermediate-mass particle was termed a "meson" (meaning "middle-weight"). Such particles were subsequently sought in cosmic rays, and were apparently found in 1937 by two separate groups. However, the particles seemed to have the wrong lifetime and their masses could not be determined reproducibly. It was subsequently discovered that cosmic ray particles contained two intermediate-mass particles, which came to be named the muon and the pion. The muon turned out to be a heavy counterpart to the electron and not a meson at all (although it is still sometimes called a mu meson for historical reasons), but the pion was indeed a true meson of the kind predicted by Yukawa.
Antimeson, Antiquark, Hadron, Pion, Quark
References
Griffiths, D. J. "Mesons (1934-1947)." §1.4 in Introduction to Elementary Particles. New York: Wiley, pp. 17-18, 1987.