- Gauge boson
In
particle physics , gauge bosons areboson ic particles that act as carriers of the fundamental forces of nature. More specifically,elementary particle s whoseinteraction s are described bygauge theory exert forces on each other by the exchange of gauge bosons, usually asvirtual particle s.Standard Model gauge bosons
In the
Standard Model , there are three kinds of gauge bosons:photons ,W and Z bosons , andgluon s. Each corresponds to one of the three Standard Model interactions: photons are gauge bosons of theelectromagnetic interaction , W and Z bosons carry theweak interaction , and the gluons carry thestrong interaction . Due tocolor confinement , isolated gluons do not occur at low energies. What could result instead are massiveglueball s (as of 2006 , these are not widely confirmed experimentally).Multiplicity of gauge bosons
In a quantized
gauge theory , gauge bosons are quanta of the gauge fields. Consequently, there are as many gauge bosons as there are generators of the gauge field. Inquantum electrodynamics , the gauge group is "U"(1); in this simple case, there is only one gauge boson. Inquantum chromodynamics , the more complicated group "SU"(3) has eight generators, corresponding to the eight gluons. The three W and Z bosons correspond (roughly) to the three generators of "SU"(2) in GWS theory.Massive gauge bosons
For technical reasons involving
gauge invariance , gauge bosons are described mathematically by field equations for massless particles. Therefore, at a naïve theoretical level all gauge bosons are required to be massless, and the forces that they describe are required to be long-ranged. The conflict between this idea and experimental evidence that the weak interaction has a very short range requires further theoretical insight.According to the
Standard Model , theW and Z bosons gain mass via theHiggs mechanism . In the Higgs mechanism, the four gauge bosons (of "SU"(2)×"U"(1) symmetry) of the unifiedelectroweak interaction couple to aHiggs field . This field undergoesspontaneous symmetry breaking due to the shape of its interaction potential. As a result, the universe is permeated by a nonzero Higgsvacuum expectation value . This VEV couples to three of the electroweak gauge bosons (the Ws and Z), giving them mass; the remaining gauge boson remains massless (the photon). This theory also predicts the existence of a scalarHiggs boson , which has not yet been observed.Beyond the Standard Model
Grand unification theories
In grand unified theories (GUTs), additional gauge bosons called
X and Y bosons would exist. These would direct interactions betweenquark s andlepton s, violating conservation ofbaryon number and causingproton decay . These bosons would be extremely massive (even more so than theW and Z bosons ) due to symmetry breaking. No evidence of such bosons (for example, due to proton decays seen inSuper-Kamiokande ) has ever been seen.Gravitons
The fourth fundamental interaction,
gravity , may also be carried by a boson, called thegraviton . In the absence of experimental evidence and a mathematically coherent theory ofquantum gravity , it is unknown whether this would be a gauge boson or not. The role ofgauge invariance ingeneral relativity is played by a similar symmetry:diffeomorphism invariance .Z' boson
See section
Z' boson ee also
*
Fundamental interaction
*Boson
*Quantum chromodynamics
*Quantum electrodynamics
*Electroweak interaction
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