Wednesday, 07-Jan-2009 21:17:24 GMT Tell a friendLink to this pageRandom Article
 
 
Online encyclopedia

 


Boson

Bosons, named after Satyendra Nath Bose, are particles which form totally-symmetric composite quantum states. As a result, they obey Bose-Einstein statistics. The spin-statistics theorem[?] states that bosons have integer spin.

All elementary particles are either bosons or fermions.

Elementary bosons act as the carriers of the fundamental forces.

Particles composed of a number of other particles (such as protons or nuclei) can be either fermions or bosons, depending on their total spin. Hence, many nuclei are in fact bosons. While fermions obey the Pauli exclusion principle: "no more than one fermion can occupy a single quantum state", there is no exclusion property for bosons, which are free to (and indeed, other things being equal, prefer to) crowd into the same quantum state[?]. This explains the spectrum of black-body radiation and the operation of lasers, the properties of liquid Helium-4[?] and superconductors and the posibility of bosons to form Bose-Einstein condensates, a particular state of matter.

Examples of bosons:

See also: Identical particles

 

Tell a friend about this page.
Send this page
Bookmark Boson.

 

Link to this page: The easy way to educate your website visitors. Post a link to definition / meaning of " Boson " on your site.
HTML code: Resulting link:

Boson

 

This online educational article is provided by contributions of Wikimedia Foundation.
Licensed under the GNU free documentation license. View live article. Copyright & Disclaimer - Contact

Partners: Digital Gadgets | Logo Design | Business Articles | Online Calculators

Anti-Spam Coalition