abbottsys said:
Why are there exactly 8 gluons? Is this related to the fact that the color force has 3 charges, and if so how? More generally, is there a simple formula that gives the number of gauge bosons for any gauge field?
Yes, it is. The number of possible colors is the dimension of the SU gauge symmetry group. The gauge fields that mediate this interaction correspond to the generators of the symmetry.
In general, any unitary matrix (\hat{U} \cdot \hat{U}^{\dagger} = \hat{U}^{\dagger} \cdot \hat{U} = \hat{1}) may be written as:
<br />
\hat{U} = \exp{\left[i \, \hat{A}\right]}, \; \hat{A}^{\dagger} = \hat{A}<br />
An N \times N hermitian (self-adjoint) matrix has N real numbers along the main diagonal and the elements in the lower triangle are just the complex conjugate of the elements in the upper triangle. The number of elements in the upper triangle is equal to the number of pairs (for the indices) that you can make without repetition (they are not on the diagonal) and without the ordering being important (if one pair is in the upper triangle, then the other one is in the lower triangle). Therefore, their number is:
<br />
C^{2}_{N} = \left(\stackrel{N}{2}\right) = \frac{N (N - 1)}{2}<br />
But, for each of these elements we need 2 real numbers (since they are complex numbers) and so, we need N(N - 1) off-diagonal parameters.
The condition of the group being 'special' means that:
<br />
\mathrm{det}\left(\hat{U}\right) = \exp{\left[i \, \mathrm{Tr}(\hat{A})\right]} = 1 \Rightarrow \mathrm{Tr}{A} = 0<br />
This gives one linear constraint among the N real diagonal elements. Thus, we actually have N - 1 real parameters along the main diagonal. Finally, the total number of real parameters is:
<br />
N (N - 1) (N - 1) = (N - 1)(N + 1) = N^{2} - 1<br />
The number of real parameters which determine a special unitary N \times N matrix is equal to the number of generators of the SU(N) group.
For N = 3 you get 3^{2} - 1 = 9 - 1 = 8 generators. This is the number of gluons.
Questions for you:
What if N = 2? How many 'charges' are there? How many gauge bosons are there? Do you know of such a theory?
What if N = 1? Do you really need the specialty condition? Do you know of such a theory?