
In particle physics, a gauge boson is a force carrier, a bosonic particle that carries any of the fundamental interactions of nature. Elementary particles, whose interactions are described by a gauge theory, interact with each other by the exchange of gauge bosons—usually as virtual particles. == Gauge bosons in the Standard Model == The Standar...
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(from the article `subatomic particle`) In addition to the Higgs particle, or particles, electroweak theory also predicts the existence of an electrically neutral carrier for the weak ... ...of massless photons, best known as the `particles` of light; such interactions are not possible between uncharged, electrically neutral p...
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Any of the particles that carrry the forces of the Standard Model. They include the photon for electromagnetism, W and Z-bosons for the weak force, gluons for the strong force, and the graviton for gravity. A gauge boson is any particle whose existence is demanded by a principle of gauge invariance.
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In physics, a gauge boson is a boson that mediates the interaction between elementary particles. There are four types: photons for electromagnetic interactions, gluons for strong interactions, intermediate vector bosons for weak interactions, and gravitons for gravitational interactions.
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[
n] - a particle that mediates the interaction of two elementary particles
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Any of the particles that carry the four fundamental forces of nature (see forces, fundamental). Gauge bosons are elementary particles that cannot be subdivided, and include the photon, the graviton, the gluons, and the W
+, W
-, and Z particles
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