[Physics] Can bosons have anti-particles

antimattercharge-conjugationparticle-physicsquantum-field-theorystandard-model

Can bosons have anti-particles? In the past, I would have answered this question with a yes, primarily because I can imagine writing down a QFT for complex scalars that has a $U(1)$ symmetry that allows me to assign a conserved charge. That is, I expect to obtain a charged spin-0 boson with an additive quantum number. A $CP$-transformation would change these quantum numbers into their negatives and I would consider the corresponding particle an anti-particle.

Of course I know at the same time that Standard Model particles, such as the $Z$-boson and the Higgs boson, are considered not to have observable anti-particles (in the way that electrons have, for instance). On the other hand, mesons are considered (composite) bosons and are known to have anti-particles. I used to take the viewpoint that the mentioned elementary bosons are their own anti-particles, because they are charge-neutral.

After reading, by chance, an interview with Geoff Taylor (Melbourne) I am a bit confused, however. He says that bosons can not have anti-particles, because this property is restricted to Fermions and explicitly refutes the idea that they are their own anti-particles:

"Really fermions are the things where we have this idea of a particle
and anti-particle pair," says Taylor, "anti-particles at the
fundamental level are fermions with the opposite charge."

"The $W+$ and $W-$ bosons only differ by charge so it's an easy mistake to
talk about it that way [as particle and anti-particle], but it's just a pair of different charges."

"While they behave in some sense like particle and anti-particle, we
don't think of one as the anti-particle counterpart of the other
because they're force carriers," says Taylor

"Fermions have conservation laws associated with them, so for example
they are created in particle-anti-particle pairs, the sum of their
quantum numbers cancelling to maintain the conservation laws,"
explains Taylor.

"Bosons operate under different laws and can be created singly. This
is a crucial distinction and is in nature of being either matter
particles or force carriers."

(It should perhaps be mentioned that he works in experimental HEP-data analysis and not theory, but still he could know more.)

Which, if any, of these viewpoints is correct?

Best Answer

In the standard model, there is no elementary spin 0 boson being electrically charged (but there are many charged spin 0 composite particles). However, in many extensions such as supersymmetry, there are such particles: the scalar partner of the electron, the selectron carries the same charge as the electron. The anti-selectron is the spin 0 partner of the positron. Thus the answer to your question is yes.