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  2. List of particles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_particles

    Since then, the particle has been shown to behave, interact, and decay in many of the ways predicted for Higgs particles by the Standard Model, as well as having even parity and zero spin, two fundamental attributes of a Higgs boson. This also means it is the first elementary scalar particle discovered in nature.

  3. Higgs boson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgs_boson

    Particle physicist Adam Falkowski states that the essential qualities of a Higgs boson are that it is a spin-0 (scalar) particle which also couples to mass (W and Z bosons); proving spin-0 alone is insufficient. [13] Couplings to mass strongly evidenced ("At 95% confidence level c V is within 15% of the standard model value c V = 1"). [13]

  4. Standard Model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Model

    The Higgs particle is a massive scalar elementary particle theorized by Peter Higgs in 1964, when he showed that Goldstone's 1962 theorem (generic continuous symmetry, which is spontaneously broken) provides a third polarisation of a massive vector field.

  5. Spin (physics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spin_(physics)

    It is the first scalar elementary particle (spin 0) known to exist in nature. Atomic nuclei have nuclear spin which may be either half-integer or integer, so that the nuclei may be either fermions or bosons.

  6. Mathematical formulation of the Standard Model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_formulation...

    Standard Model of Particle Physics. The diagram shows the elementary particles of the Standard Model (the Higgs boson, the three generations of quarks and leptons, and the gauge bosons), including their names, masses, spins, charges, chiralities, and interactions with the strong, weak and electromagnetic forces.

  7. Scalar boson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalar_boson

    A scalar boson is a boson whose spin equals zero. [1] A boson is a particle whose wave function is symmetric under particle exchange and therefore follows Bose–Einstein statistics. The spin–statistics theorem implies that all bosons have an integer-valued spin. [2] Scalar bosons are the subset of bosons with zero-valued spin.

  8. Boson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boson

    In particle physics, a boson (/ ˈ b oʊ z ɒ n / [1] / ˈ b oʊ s ɒ n / [2]) is a subatomic particle whose spin quantum number has an integer value (0, 1, 2, ...). Bosons form one of the two fundamental classes of subatomic particle, the other being fermions, which have odd half-integer spin (1 ⁄ 2, 3 ⁄ 2, 5 ⁄ 2, ...). Every observed ...

  9. Graviton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graviton

    The graviton must be a spin-2 boson because the source of gravitation is the stress–energy tensor, a second-order tensor (compared with electromagnetism's spin-1 photon, the source of which is the four-current, a first-order tensor). Additionally, it can be shown that any massless spin-2 field would give rise to a force indistinguishable from ...