Is there a general area that describes community behavioral standards that might be handy in cases like this?
There are no "behavioral" standards for downvoting. People can downvote for whatever reasons they choose. Obsessing over why your answer was downvoted is, in general, unproductive. Unless you start seeing a pattern, or you've only received downvotes (i.e., downvotes but no upvotes), you shouldn't waste much time worrying about it.
Downvotes are meant to be anonymous, and casting a downvote does not require the user to leave a comment explaining why (s)he downvoted the post. Some users are in the habit of doing this, others have stopped because it's rarely appreciated and it just results in a flurry of "but why did you have to actually downvote for that reason?" whining by the original poster. I fall into the latter camp most of the time. Asking why people downvoted your post on Meta is slightly better than asking it in the comments on said post, but only slightly.
In this case, my executive opinion is that someone simply didn't like your answer. They probably disagreed with your approach to the problem, or disagreed with the conclusion of your analysis. That's perfectly okay: they have every right to do so.
Answers can also be downvoted for (this is not by any means a comprehensive list):
- Technical inaccuracy
- Irrelevance to the question
- Blatant plagarism without attribution
- Their tendency to lead the user down the wrong path or encourage generally bad practices
- Blatant promotion of one's own products without disclosure of relevant affiliations (what is effectively relevant "spam")
- Cross-posting the same answer to numerous questions
- Poor formatting, unintelligible grammar/syntax, and/or stylistic issues
You could argue that some of these things should be fixed through edits, flagged for handling by a moderator, or whatever else. Often users will do that, too. But the point still remains that they are all common reasons for casting a downvote, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with any of them as reasons for doing so.
As to the rest of your question, there are only two scenarios where downvotes are automatically cast:
Questions that are closed as "not a real question" and "off topic" (but not migrated to another site) get an automatic downvote from the Community user.
Posts that are flagged as spam get an automatic downvote from the Community user for each flag that is raised. If those flags are dismissed as invalid by a moderator, the downvotes are removed. Otherwise, if the flags are valid and acted upon, the post will be deleted at a -100 reputation point penalty to the original poster.