- Vector boson
A vector boson is a
boson with spin equal to one unit of (Planck's constant divided by ). In elementaryparticle physics , the vector bosons currently considered to befundamental particle s are all gauge bosons. The most familiar vector boson is thephoton , orquantum oflight , which is a gauge boson. For some time, through the 1970s and 80s, the search for intermediate vector bosons, vector bosons of "intermediate" mass, was a major topic inhigh energy physics .There also exist composite particles that are vector bosons, such as the vector
meson s, made of aquark andantiquark with a totalangular momentum of one unit.Explanation
The name "vector boson" arises from
quantum field theory . The component of such a particle's spin along any axis will always be measured to have one of "three" values: , 0, or (this is, at least, true for massive vector bosons; the situation is a bit different for massless particles such as the photon, for reasons beyond the scope of this article). The space of spin states therefore has three degrees of freedom, the same as the number of components of a mathematical vector in three-dimensional space.Quantum superposition s of these states can be taken such that they transform underrotation s just like the spatial components of a rotating vector. If the vector boson is taken to be thequantum of a field, the field is avector field , hence the name.ee also
*
Pseudovector meson
*Scalar boson
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