Aethaeon
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Hello,
Just a few questions about a couple of terms in and not in the SM Lagrangian. I'll talk in particular about these fields, and their representations in SU(3) x SU(2) x U(1)
Q (3,2,1/6) (left-handed quarks, fermion)
U (3,1,2/3) (right-handed up-quarks, fermion)
\phi (1,2,-1/2) (higgs, scalar)
1) Mass terms
There is a term in the Lagrangian of the form:
Z^a_b \overline{Q_a}\not{\nabla}Q^b
Why can't there be a term like
Z^a_b \overline{Q_a}Q^b where a and b are the SU(3) indices
The diagonal of Z would act as mass terms for the Qs
Likewise for the other fermion fields.. I don't see an immediate reason why those terms should be excluded?
2) Generalizations of pre-mass terms
There is a term in the Lagrangian of the form
Z^a_b \overline{Q_a_{\alpha}} U^b \phi^{\alpha}
with a,b SU(3) indices and \alpha the SU(2) index.
The reason this works out is because
\overline{Q_a_{\alpha}}
transforms under (\bar{3},\bar{2},1/6), and the two fields together
U^b \phi^{\alpha}
transform under (3,2,-1/6) -- so the interaction conserves all the charges
Why can't there be a more general term that can mix up the SU(2) indices, like
Z^a_b^{\alpha}_{\beta} \overline{Q_a_{\alpha}} U^b \phi^{\beta}
Thanks so much for your time and help..
Just a few questions about a couple of terms in and not in the SM Lagrangian. I'll talk in particular about these fields, and their representations in SU(3) x SU(2) x U(1)
Q (3,2,1/6) (left-handed quarks, fermion)
U (3,1,2/3) (right-handed up-quarks, fermion)
\phi (1,2,-1/2) (higgs, scalar)
1) Mass terms
There is a term in the Lagrangian of the form:
Z^a_b \overline{Q_a}\not{\nabla}Q^b
Why can't there be a term like
Z^a_b \overline{Q_a}Q^b where a and b are the SU(3) indices
The diagonal of Z would act as mass terms for the Qs
Likewise for the other fermion fields.. I don't see an immediate reason why those terms should be excluded?
2) Generalizations of pre-mass terms
There is a term in the Lagrangian of the form
Z^a_b \overline{Q_a_{\alpha}} U^b \phi^{\alpha}
with a,b SU(3) indices and \alpha the SU(2) index.
The reason this works out is because
\overline{Q_a_{\alpha}}
transforms under (\bar{3},\bar{2},1/6), and the two fields together
U^b \phi^{\alpha}
transform under (3,2,-1/6) -- so the interaction conserves all the charges
Why can't there be a more general term that can mix up the SU(2) indices, like
Z^a_b^{\alpha}_{\beta} \overline{Q_a_{\alpha}} U^b \phi^{\beta}
Thanks so much for your time and help..
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