The corresponding term in Lagrangian for the coupling of quarks to gauge fields reads ∑iˉQiDμγμQi.
Considering the Yukawa terms it is generally stated, that no symmetry principle forbids generation mixing terms in the first place, therefore one writes in general
∑i,jˉYijQiΦQi.
After symmetry breaking the mass matrices are introduced, which aren't orthogonal. Global SU(2) invariance is then used to diagonalize them and this eventually leads to generation mixing through the W-Bosons, expressed through the CKM matrix.
I was wondering why generation mixing terms in the Lagrangian aren't allowed in the first place for the Quark-Gauge-Field coupling term, like it is for the Yukawa term. In other words: What prevents the Quark-Gauge part of the Lagrangian from being
∑iˉQiDμ,ijγμQj,
which of course would mean that some gauge coupling matrices gij appear in the Dμ,ij term, instead of the universal g.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-10-11 09:49 (UTC), posted by SE-user JakobH