Physics:Quantum Higgs boson: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 11:13, 22 May 2026

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Higgs boson is a Book II topic in the Quantum Collection. The quantum Higgs boson is the particle excitation of the Higgs field. In the Standard Model, the Higgs field is linked to electroweak symmetry breaking and to the masses of many elementary particles. The observed Higgs boson provides experimental access to this field and its couplings. The quantum Higgs boson is the particle excitation of the Higgs field. In the Standard Model, the Higgs field is linked to electroweak symmetry breaking and to the masses of many elementary particles. The observed Higgs boson provides experimental access to this field and its couplings. The Higgs field has a nonzero vacuum value in the Standard Model. Through electroweak symmetry breaking, W and Z bosons acquire mass, while fermion masses arise through Yukawa couplings to the Higgs field.

Complex yellow illustration of the Higgs boson as an excitation of the Higgs field and its couplings.

Higgs field

The Higgs field has a nonzero vacuum value in the Standard Model. Through electroweak symmetry breaking, W and Z bosons acquire mass, while fermion masses arise through Yukawa couplings to the Higgs field. The photon remains massless in this framework.[1]

Discovery and measurements

ATLAS and CMS reported observation of a new boson near 125 GeV in 2012. Subsequent measurements of spin, parity, production modes, and decay channels support its identification as the Standard Model Higgs boson, while precision coupling measurements continue to test for deviations.[2]

Open questions

The Higgs sector raises questions about naturalness, vacuum stability, dark matter connections, and whether additional scalar particles exist. Future colliders and improved LHC analyses aim to measure rare decays, self-coupling, and possible new interactions.

Description

Higgs boson is a matter-scale concept used to organize how quantum theory describes atoms, particles, fields, condensed matter, plasma, or spacetime-related systems. In the Quantum Collection it is placed by scale so the reader can move from materials and molecules down to subatomic degrees of freedom.

Quantum context

At this scale, the relevant behavior is controlled by quantized states, interactions, conservation laws, and the way excitations or particles are observed. The concept is normally linked to measurable properties such as energy, momentum, charge, spin, spectra, scattering rates, or collective modes.

Role in the collection

This page provides a compact reference point for related pages in Book II. It should be read together with nearby matter-scale topics and the corresponding foundations in quantum mechanics.[3]

See also

Table of contents (84 articles)

Index

Full contents

References

  1. Schwartz, Matthew D. (2014). Quantum Field Theory and the Standard Model. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-03473-0. 
  2. Particle Data Group (2022). "Review of Particle Physics". Progress of Theoretical and Experimental Physics 2022 (8): 083C01. doi:10.1093/ptep/ptac097. 
  3. "Quantum mechanics". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_mechanics. 


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Higgs boson