@Felthry Yuh, photons are the gauge bosons for the EM interaction/field. :3
@kellerfuchs I thought that was the case but I wasn't certain whether the B boson came into it anywhere and wanted to be sure before putting the information into our master's thesis!
@Felthry Ooooh, fancies; what's the thesis about? :3
Regarding the B boson, IIRC there's something about it and W3 being precursors to the photon (and Z?), prior to spontaneous symetry breaking.
It all goes very much over my head though :3
@kellerfuchs oh, no, I had it wrong, the W⁰ and B⁰ bosons mix to form the Z⁰ and photon. I _thought_ that getting three out of two seemed wrong
@kellerfuchs Quantum physics is Fun™.
@Felthry Yuh.
And I still would like to know what's your thesis about (if you feel like sharing), even if it's unrelated :3
@kellerfuchs Modelling common-mode voltage, specifically including nonideal components, and how to mitigate EMI at specific harmonics.
@Felthry There are some words I know there :O
*is big dumm kitty.*
What's common-mode voltage?
@kellerfuchs the common and differential modes are two orthogonal components of the voltage in a circuit; basically, if you have the measured voltages on two lines of V₁ and V₂, you can define Vdm as V₁-V₂ and Vcm as (V₁+V₂)/2. Differential mode quantities are almost always the only ones of interest, but CM quantities also contribute to noise and EMI.
@kellerfuchs so the electroweak gauge bosons are the B⁰, W⁺, W⁰, and W⁻, and the two neutral members mix to produce the Z⁰ and γ