Let M be the mass matrix for fermions ψ+ and for ψ− (separately). It is obtained by ⧸D⧸D+=−∂2t+M2
Then M2=r2Id16−⧸v, Now, the 16∗16 matrix ⧸v has a zero trace, and it square is →v2Id16, so the only possibility is that the matrix ⧸v has 8 eigenvalues v, and 8 eigenvalues −v (here v means √→v2). So the matrix M2 has 8 eigenvalues r2+v and 8 eigenvalues r2−v. This is true for ψ+ and for ψ−, while ψ3 is obviously massless.
[EDIT]
The gamma matrices of SO(9) are real, so ⧸B is hermitian. ∂t is antihermitian (because i∂t is hermitian), so starting with ⧸D=∂t−⧸B, it is easy to see that ⧸D†=−∂t−⧸B
If you neglect order 3 terms in the Lagrangian (ψ2Y,ψ2A), and apply Lagrange equation on ψ+, you get ⧸Dψ−=0. And, because ψ+=(ψ−)∗, and ⧸B is real, you have also ⧸Dψ+=0
The mass matrix apply separately to ψ+ and ψ−, simply because ψ+=(ψ−)∗, and the mass matrix is real.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-03-07 16:47 (UCT), posted by SE-user Trimok