thinktank2 said:
- Can two Bosons 'collide' in the same sense as the Fermions (Since Pauli's exclusion principle is not applicable for Bosons)?
- The Leptons have anti-leptons (positron, anti-muon, anti-tau and three anti-neutrinos). Each of the 6 Quarks have their corresponding anti-quark. So, do the gauge bosons (photon, gluon, Z & W, graviton) have corresponding anti-particles?
- If so, what happens when a gauge boson and it's anti-particle meet up at the same point in space?
1. No, gauge bosons are bosons, they can share the same quantum state.
2. Yes, all gauge bosons have antiparticles. The photon is its own antiparticle. The W^+ and W^- are antiparticles of each other. The Z is its own antiparticle. A "red x anti-blue" gluon is the anti-particle of an "anti-red x blue" gluon, and similar for the other colors. The two diagonal gluons are each their own anti-particle.
3. When a gauge boson and its antiparticle meet up, they annihilate and produce something else. The most commonly-known example is pair-production from two photons: \gamma + \gamma \rightarrow e^+ + e^-.
And to answer the obvious follow-up question, "If photons are their own anti-particles and can annihilate against each other, why doesn't it happen all the time?", the answer is two-fold:
First, there is not always enough energy to pair-produce. The photon is massless, but the electron and positron are massive. So the photons need enough momentum in order to annihilate and produce massive particles.
Second, the process is reversible, as the electron and positron can also annihilate to produce photons. In fact, it's much more likely to happen in this direction, since the electron and positron have rest mass, and so always have enough energy to produce photons. So, in reality this process reaches an equilibrium where it is happening in both directions, and at low energies you will have many more photons around than pairs of e^- and e^+.