Doc Dienstag said:
Question:
Why though did people assume that neutrinos were massless in the first place? It seems to me, that there is no other difference between an electron-neutrino, a tauon-neutrino or a myon-neutrino other than their masses. How then did it make sense at the time to assume that there are three types (=generations?) of neutrinos without even knowing a difference between them? What would be the point of a Standard Model that has three different neutrinos with no difference between them?
Is the answer to my question perhaps that physicists only discovered that there are three types of neutrinos at the same time that they concluded that neutrinos must have a mass other than zero?
I may be the only one here old enough to answer some of your questions.
1. There was no evidence in theory or experiment for a mass for the neutrino, and most theoretical formulations were much neater without a neutrino mass. Feynman made a convincing argument about a massless neutrino being the cornerstone of the V-A weak interaction. But a neutrino mass was always considered a possibility, and there were even conjectural papers about neutrino oscillation early on. The 1965 PDG tables (then a wallet card) listed 0(<0.2 keV) for the electron neutrino mass.
2. There are important differences between the three types of neutrino. Their Weak
Interactions are different, with conservation of neutrino flavor. When an electron neutrino strikes a nucleus, it can produce an electron, but a muon neutrino can only produce a muon.
It was originally believed the the mu neutrino might be the same as the electron neutrino.
The experimental discovery that they had mutually exclusive weak interactions won the Nobel prize for Lederman, Schwartz, and Steinberger.
Incidentally, there are 8 massless gluons, all different, and all needed, but experimental determination of this is still in the future if ever.
3. One of the beauties of the SM is that there are three families of leptons, in consistency and collaboration with three families of quarks.
4. The answer to your last question is no.