Spectral Structure of the Naive Dirac Operator on the Face-Centered Cubic Lattice

Spectral Structure of the Naive Dirac Operator
on the Face-Centered Cubic Lattice
Raghu Kulkarni
SSMTheory Group, IDrive Inc, Calabasas, CA
raghu@idrive.com
March 2026
Abstract
We construct the naive Dirac operator on the Face-Centered Cubic (FCC) lattice
(
K = 12
) in three spatial dimensions and map its complete zero-mode structure.
The spectrum is naturally stratied into three topological classes: a singlet at
Γ
, an
isolated quartet at the four
L
-points, and continuous nodal lines along the Brillouin
zone boundary connecting
X
and
W
. No other interior zeros were found in a
64
3
numerical search (all minimizers lie adjacent to the known zero loci); completeness
is conjectured but not proved, and this is the paper's principal open problem. Com-
puting the Jacobian determinant at each isolated zero assigns topological indices
(not
γ
5
eigenvalues; there is no
γ
5
in 3D)
χ
Γ
= +1
and
χ
L
= 1
(per point). A
numerical winding-number computation yields integer winding
+1
for each
X
W
nodal line segment; with 3 nodal loops (one per spatial axis, separate connected
components of the zero set), the total boundary chirality is
χ
boundary
= +3
, and the
Nielsen-Ninomiya sum
+1 4 + 3 = 0
is satised. The
L
-point quartet transforms
under the chiral octahedral group
O
=
S
4
and decomposes as
4 1 3
; Schur's
lemma constrains any
S
4
-invariant mass matrix to split singlet and triplet, with an
explicit anisotropic Wilson term producing
M = 4/a
. The stratied spectrum
with distinct Wilson masses (
0
,
12/a
,
16/a
) and distinct chiralities across three
topological classes has no parallel on hypercubic lattices, where all
2
3
= 8
doublers
are geometrically equivalent with identical gapping scales.
Keywords:
FCC lattice, lattice fermions, fermion doubling, Nielsen-Ninomiya the-
orem, Brillouin zone
1 Introduction
On a standard hypercubic lattice in
D
spatial dimensions, the naive discretization of the
Dirac equation produces
2
D
fermion doublers [1, 2], all geometrically equivalent. Wilson
fermions [3] and staggered fermions [4, 5] suppress or reduce these artifacts, but at the
cost of chiral symmetry or fermion content.
We work in 3 spatial dimensions throughout. The primary application of lattice
fermionsQCDrequires 4D, but the 3D case is of independent interest for two reasons:
it is the natural setting for condensed matter applications (Weyl semimetals, frustrated
magnets, topological insulators on non-cubic lattices), and it provides a tractable testing
ground for non-hypercubic lattice constructions that may generalize to 4D. The FCC
1
lattice exists in any dimension, and the spectral analysis could in principle be attempted
on a 4D FCC analogue (the
D
4
root lattice, with 24 nearest neighbors and a 24-cell
Brillouin zone), though that case introduces substantially greater complexity that we do
not analyze here.
The Face-Centered Cubic (FCC) lattice oers a dierent starting point. It is the dens-
est sphere packing in 3D (the Kepler conjecture, proved by Hales [6]), has coordination
number
K = 12
, and possesses the full octahedral point group symmetry
O
h
. Gauge elds
on the Body-Centered Cubic (BCC) lattice have been studied [9], and FCC-type lattices
appear in condensed matter contexts (frustrated magnets, Weyl semimetals). However,
to our knowledge, the zero-mode structure of the naive Dirac operator on the FCC lattice
has not been systematically characterized in the lattice eld theory literature.
In this paper we classify all zero modes of the naive Dirac operator on the FCC
lattice (Section 3), compute chiralities at isolated zeros (Section 4), independently verify
the Nielsen-Ninomiya theorem via winding-number computation (Section 5), and analyze
the representation-theoretic structure of the
L
-point quartet (Section 6).
2 The FCC Lattice
2.1 Real space
The FCC lattice is generated by the 12 nearest-neighbor vectors:
N = {(±1, ±1, 0), (±1, 0, ±1), (0, ±1, ±1)}
(1)
in units of
a/2
, where
a
is the cubic lattice constant. The convex hull of these 12 points is
the cuboctahedron [7]: 12 vertices, 24 edges, 14 faces. The symmetry group is
O
h
(order
48).
2.2 Reciprocal space
The reciprocal lattice is BCC. The rst Brillouin zone (FBZ) is a truncated octahedron
[8], with high-symmetry points:
Γ = (0, 0, 0)
L = (±π/2, ±π/2, ±π/2)
(8 points;
k
and
k
identied
4 independent)
X = (π, 0, 0), (0, π, 0), (0, 0, π)
(3 independent)
W = (π, π/2, 0)
and permutations (12 points, 6 independent) (2)
3 The Naive Dirac Operator
3.1 Construction
We work in the integer basis dened by Eq. (1), where the neighbor vectors
n
have integer
components (in units of
a/2
). The momenta
k
are correspondingly dimensionless, with
the Brillouin zone boundaries at multiples of
π
.
In 3-dimensional Euclidean space (the signature relevant for lattice eld theory in
imaginary time), the minimal spinor representation is
2 × 2
(Pauli matrices
σ
µ
). There
2
Γ
L
(
×
4
)
X
Brillouin zone:
Γ
(singlet),
L
(quartet),
X
-
W
(nodal lines)
Figure 1: Projection of the FCC Brillouin zone (truncated octahedron) showing zero-
mode locations:
Γ
(green), 4
L
-points (red squares), and
X
W
nodal lines (blue dashed).
is no
γ
5
operator in 3D Euclidean space; the chirality we compute is the topological
index
χ
i
= sgn(det J)
the local degree of the map
f : T
3
R
3
not a
γ
5
eigenvalue.
Readers familiar with 4D lattice QCD should note this distinction: in 4D, chirality refers
to the eigenvalue of
γ
5
= γ
0
γ
1
γ
2
γ
3
; in 3D, no such operator exists. The topological
index classies zero modes by the orientation of the
f
-eld in their neighborhood. The
relevant no-go theorem in
D
spatial dimensions states that the total degree of the map
ˆ
f = f /|f | : T
D
\ f
1
(0) S
D1
must vanish [1, 2, 10]. For
D = 3
, this constrains
P
i
χ
i
= 0
, where
χ
i
= sgn(det J)
at isolated zeros and
χ
i
equals the transverse winding
number for nodal-line components. The extension from isolated zeros to codimension-2
nodal lines is standard in the condensed matter literature on Weyl nodal-line semimetals
(see e.g. [11] for the topological classication); in the lattice eld theory context, the
relevant mathematical fact is that the degree of
ˆ
f
decomposes as a sum over all connected
components of
f
1
(0)
, with each component contributing its linking number.
We dene the kinetic vector eld:
f
µ
(k) =
1
a
X
n∈N
n
µ
sin(k · n), µ = 1, 2, 3
(3)
where
k · n =
P
ν
k
ν
n
ν
. The naive Dirac operator is:
D(k) = iγ · f (k) = i
3
X
µ=1
γ
µ
f
µ
(k)
(4)
where
γ
µ
are
2 × 2
Pauli matrices. Zero modes occur wherever
|f (k)| = 0
.
3
3.2 Zero-mode classication
Numerical minimization of
|f (k)|
2
across the full Brillouin zone, combined with analytic
verication at high-symmetry points, yields three topological classes.
Proposition 1
(Zero-mode stratication)
.
The naive Dirac operator on the FCC lattice
has zero modes at:
1.
Γ = (0, 0, 0)
: a single isolated zero (the fundamental mode).
2.
L = (±π/2, ±π/2, ±π/2)
: four isolated zeros (with antipodal identication).
3.
X
W
boundary lines: continuous families of zeros connecting
X
-points to
W
-points
on the zone boundary.
Proof.
At
Γ
:
sin(k · n) = 0
for all
n
, giving a zero trivially.
At
L = (π/2, π/2, π/2)
: the 12 scalar products
L · n
take values in
{0, ±π}
. Since
sin(0) = sin(±π) = 0
, every term vanishes. The same holds at all 4 independent
L
-points.
For the boundary line
k(t) = (π, t, 0)
connecting
X = (π, 0, 0)
to
W = (π, π/2, 0)
:
the FCC neighbor set has inversion symmetry (
n N n N
). When
k
1
= π
, the
terms from
n
and
n
cancel:
sin(k ·n) + sin(k ·(n)) = 0
because
sin(π + x) = sin(x)
.
Analogous lines exist for all symmetry-equivalent
X
W
paths.
Completeness: the function
|f (k)|
2
is a sum of squares of trigonometric polynomials
and therefore real-analytic on the torus
T
3
. Its zero set is an analytic variety whose
isolated components are rigid. A
64
3
grid search over the full Brillouin zone, proled as
a function of exclusion distance
d
from all known zero loci, gives:
d min |f |
2
Minimizer location Dist. to nearest zero
0.10 4.5 × 10
4
(0, 0.94π, 0.94π) 0.20
0.20 0.005 (0.91π, 0.91π, 0) 0.30
0.30 0.027 (0.88π, 0.88π, 0) 0.39
0.40 0.099 (0, 0.84π, 0.84π) 0.49
0.50 0.28 (0.81π, 0.81π, 0) 0.59
In every case, the minimizer sits at distance
d
from the nearest known zero (the
X
W
boundary nodal lines)it is the closest allowed point to the known zero set, not a
hidden interior minimum. The minimum
|f |
2
increases monotonically with
d
. Under
O
h
symmetry, any additional isolated zero generates an orbit of
6
points; the grid spacing
(
k = 0.098
) would detect at least one orbit member.
We conjecture the classication is complete (as stated in the abstract, this is the
paper's principal open problem). The least-constrained region is the BZ interior with
|k
µ
| (0.3π, 0.7π)
, where
|f |
2
0.027
. We note that the plateau argument does not by
itself rule out a hidden minimum at
d < 0.1
; a rigorous exclusion would require either
interval arithmetic on the explicit trigonometric form of Eq. (3), or a Morse-theoretic
argument bounding the number of critical points of
|f |
2
on
T
3
.
Unlike the hypercubic lattice, where all
2
3
= 8
doublers are geometrically equivalent
zone corners, the FCC spectrum is naturally stratied into three qualitatively distinct
classes.
4
Point Coordinates
|f |
2
M
Wilson
Type
Γ (0, 0, 0)
0 0 Isolated singlet
L (
π
2
,
π
2
,
π
2
)
0
12/a
Isolated (
×4
)
X (π, 0, 0)
0
16/a
Nodal line
W (π,
π
2
, 0)
0
16/a
Nodal line
P
test
(
3π
4
,
3π
4
, 0) 1.37 15.7/a
Not a zero
Table 1: Zero modes of the naive Dirac operator on the FCC lattice.
This test point
veries that the numerical search correctly distinguishes zeros from near-zeros; its
|f |
2
=
1.37
is far above zero.
M
Wilson
is the mass from a Wilson term
(r/a)
P
n
(1 cos k · n)
with
r = 1
. At
Γ
: all cosines equal 1, so
M = 0
. At
L
: six neighbors give
cos = 1
, six
give
cos = 1
, so
M = (1/a)(6 × 0 + 6 × 2) = 12/a
. At
X = (π, 0, 0)
: eight neighbors
give
cos = 1
, four give
cos = 1
, so
M = (1/a)(8 × 2 + 4 × 0) = 16/a
.
4 Topological Index at Isolated Zeros
The topological index
χ
i
at an isolated zero
k
i
is the sign of the Jacobian determinant:
J
µν
(k) =
f
µ
k
ν
=
1
a
X
n∈N
n
µ
n
ν
cos(k · n)
(5)
Proposition 2
(
Γ
-point index)
.
At
Γ = (0, 0, 0)
:
J
µν
(Γ) =
1
a
X
n
n
µ
n
ν
=
8
a
δ
µν
(6)
This is positive denite with eigenvalues
{8/a, 8/a, 8/a}
and
det J > 0
, giving
χ
Γ
= +1
.
Proof.
At
k = 0
,
cos(k · n) = 1
for all
n
. The sum
P
n
n
µ
n
ν
over the 12 FCC neighbors
evaluates to
8δ
µν
(each o-diagonal entry cancels by symmetry; each diagonal entry sums
to 8).
Proposition 3
(
L
-point index)
.
At
L = (π/2, π/2, π/2)
, the Jacobian matrix is:
J
µν
(L) =
1
a
0 4 4
4 0 4
4 4 0
(7)
with eigenvalues
{+4, +4, 8}/a
and
det J = 128/a
3
< 0
, giving
χ
L
= 1
.
Proof.
At
L
, the 12 scalar products
L · n
take values in
{0, ±π}
. Six neighbors (with
L · n = 0
) contribute
cos = +1
; six (with
L · n = ±π
) contribute
cos = 1
.
The diagonal entries vanish: for each
µ
, the
n
2
µ
contributions from
cos = +1
and
cos = 1
neighbors cancel exactly. The o-diagonal entry
J
12
= (1/a)
P
n
n
1
n
2
cos(L ·n)
:
the 4 neighbors with
n
1
n
2
= 0
are
(±1, ±1, 0)
, all with
L ·n = ±π
(hence
cos = 1
), and
n
1
n
2
= ±1
. The products
n
1
n
2
cos(L · n)
sum to
4/a
. By symmetry, all o-diagonal
entries equal
4/a
.
The matrix
J = (4/a)(E I)
where
E
is the all-ones matrix. Its eigenvalues are:
(4/a)(3 1) = 8/a
(eigenvector
(1, 1, 1)/
3
) and
(4/a)(0 1) = +4/a
(two-fold
degenerate). The determinant is
(+4)(+4)(8)/a
3
= 128/a
3
< 0
.
With 4 independent
L
-points:
χ
total
L
= 4 ×(1) = 4
.
5
5 Boundary Chirality and Nielsen-Ninomiya
5.1 Winding-number computation
To determine
χ
boundary
independently of the Nielsen-Ninomiya theorem, we compute the
winding number of the transverse kinetic eld around each
X
W
nodal line segment.
For a nodal line along the
k
2
direction (e.g.,
k = (π, t, 0)
), we parametrize a small
circle of radius
ϵ = 0.01
in the transverse
(k
1
, k
3
)
plane. Since the nodal line runs along
k
2
, the component
f
2
is longitudinal and does not enter the transverse winding; only the
transverse components
(f
1
, f
3
)
are relevant. We compute these at 2000 points and extract
the winding:
w =
1
2π
I
d arg(f
1
+ if
3
)
(8)
Segment Transverse plane Winding
(π, t, 0) (k
1
, k
3
) +1.0000
(consistent with
+1
)
(π, 0, t) (k
1
, k
2
) +1.0000
(consistent with
+1
)
(t, π, 0) (k
2
, k
3
) +1.0000
(consistent with
+1
)
(0, π, t) (k
1
, k
3
) +0.9971
(consistent with
+1
)
(t, 0, π) (k
2
, k
3
) +0.9971
(consistent with
+1
)
(0, t, π) (k
1
, k
2
) +0.9971
(consistent with
+1
)
Table 2: Winding number of the transverse kinetic eld around each
X
W
nodal line
segment, computed at the segment midpoint with
ϵ = 0.01
and 2000 angular samples. All
six are consistent with integer winding
+1
. The rst three deviate by
< 10
4
while the
last three deviate by
0.003
; this reects a dierence in convergence rate. The segments
centered at
(π, . . .)
have their transverse circle well inside the BZ, while those centered
at
(0, π, . . .)
intersect the BZ boundary identication surface, where
f
has a kink in its
periodic extension. This kink is a coordinate artifact (not a discontinuity of
f
on
T
3
) but
slows angular convergence. At
N = 4000
:
0.9985
; at
N = 8000
:
0.9993
. The
1/N
scaling
conrms discretization error.
5.2 Loop counting
The nodal lines form closed circuits around each square face of the truncated octahedron
BZ. The square face at
k
µ
= π
has 4
X
W
segments forming one closed loop that
lies entirely within the plane
k
µ
= π
. There are 6 square faces, but opposite faces are
identied by BZ periodicity: the reciprocal lattice vector
G = (2π, 0, 0)
maps the face at
k
1
= +π
to
k
1
= π
. This leaves 3 loopsone per spatial axis.
These 3 loops are
separate connected components
of the zero set
f
1
(0)
: the loop at
k
1
= π
lies in the plane
k
1
= π
, the loop at
k
2
= π
in the plane
k
2
= π
, and the loop at
k
3
= π
in the plane
k
3
= π
. These three planes are disjoint within the BZ. To see this: the
truncated octahedron BZ of the FCC lattice is bounded by the constraint
|k
i
|+ |k
j
| π
for each pair
i = j
(in the integer-basis conventions of Eq. (1); see [8], Ch. 9). A point
with
|k
1
| = π
and
|k
2
| = π
would require
|k
1
| + |k
2
| = 2π > π
, violating this bound.
Therefore no point inside the BZ lies on two of the three planes simultaneously, and the
three loops are genuinely separate connected components of the zero set.
6
For a codimension-2 zero set (a 1D nodal line in 3D), the chirality contribution of
each connected component equals the winding number of
f
on any small circle linking
that component. This winding number is constant along the loop provided no other
zeros enter the tubular neighborhood: if
|f (k)| > 0
for all
k
within distance
ϵ
of the loop
(excluding the loop itself), then the winding is a topological invariant independent of
where on the loop the linking circle is placed. The completeness search (Proposition 1)
establishes
|f |
2
4.5 ×10
4
at Euclidean distance
d 0.1
(in the dimensionless
k
-space
units of Eq. (1)) from all known zeros, including the BZ boundary region where the nodal
loops reside. This conrms a zero-free tubular neighborhood of radius
ϵ = 0.1
around
each loop. The measured winding at every tested segment is
+1
(Table 2). Therefore:
χ
boundary
= 3 ×(+1) = +3
(9)
5.3 Nielsen-Ninomiya verication
With
χ
Γ
= +1
(Section 4),
χ
total
L
= 4
(Section 4), and
χ
boundary
= +3
(computed above):
χ
total
= +1 4 + 3 = 0
(10)
This is a consistency check, with the caveat that the topological invariance of the
winding (Section 5.1) depends on the zero-free tubular neighborhood established by the
completeness search, which is itself a conjecture (Proposition 1). Precisely:
assuming the
completeness conjecture
, the winding is a topological invariant,
χ
boundary
= +3
, and the
Nielsen-Ninomiya sum vanishes.
Caveat.
The per-segment winding is numerical (not analytic), and the identication of
3 independent loops relies on the connected-component structure of the zero set. A fully
rigorous treatment would require an analytic proof that each nodal loop has transverse
winding exactly
+1
.
6 Representation Theory of the
L
-Point Quartet
The 4 independent
L
-points are the centers of the 4 pairs of hexagonal faces of the
truncated octahedron BZ. They transform under the chiral octahedral group
O O
h
(the 24-element rotation group of the cube, isomorphic to
S
4
). The 4 body diagonals of
the cube are permuted by
O
, giving a faithful action on the quartet. We write
O
=
S
4
throughout.
Observation.
The permutation representation of
S
n
on
n
objects decomposes as
n
1 (n 1)
. For
S
4
:
4 1 3
(11)
where
1
is the trivial representation and
3
is the standard irreducible representation. This
is standard; the content specic to the FCC lattice is the consequences for the fermion
propagator.
6.1 Consequences for the propagator
Any
S
4
-invariant mass matrix
M
on the quartet, by Schur's lemma, takes the form
M =
m
1
P
1
+ m
3
P
3
(projections onto singlet and triplet). The singlet and triplet generically
7
acquire dierent masses; within the triplet, all three modes are exactly degenerate as long
as
S
4
is unbroken.
A modied Wilson term assigns
r
= 1.5
to the 6 neighbors with
|L
1
·n| = π
(aligned
with the
(1, 1, 1)
diagonal) and
r = 1
to the other 6. This breaks
O
=
S
4
S
3
. At
L
1
= (π/2, π/2, π/2)
: the 6 enhanced neighbors all have
cos(k · n) = 1
, contributing
6 × 1.5 × 2 = 18/a
. The other 6 have
cos = +1
, contributing 0. So
M(L
1
) = 18/a
.
At
L
2
= (π/2, π/2, π/2)
: only 4 enhanced neighbors give
cos = 1
(contributing
4×1.5 ×2 = 12/a
) and 2 standard neighbors also give
cos = 1
(contributing
2×1 ×2 =
4/a
); the net is
M(L
2
) = 14/a
. By
S
3
symmetry,
M(L
3
) = M(L
4
) = 14/a
. The splitting
M = 4/a
is cleanly resolved.
6.2 Properties of the quartet
The
L
-point quartet is distinguished from the boundary nodal lines by three properties:
1.
Isolation:
The
L
-points are the only zero modes in the BZ interior apart from
Γ
.
2.
Denite chirality:
Each carries
χ = 1
, computed from the Jacobian (Section 4).
3.
Gapping:
A standard Wilson term gives
L
-points mass
12/a
while
Γ
remains
massless (Table 1). The boundary lines acquire
16/a
.
7 Comparison with Other Lattices
Lattice
K
Doublers
S
n
decomp.
Simple cubic 6
2
3
= 8
equiv. corners
4 1 3
BCC 8 Multiple; no isolated quartet No natural 4-orbit
FCC 12
1(Γ) + 4(L) +
lines
4 1 3
Table 3: Doubler structure on dierent 3D lattices.
The 8 simple cubic doublers reduce
to 4 under antipodal identication, giving
4 1 3
under
S
4
formally identical to
FCC. The distinction is quantitative: on SC, all 4 receive identical Wilson mass
6r/a
and
identical Jacobian eigenvalue structure; on FCC, the 4
L
-points have
M = 12/a
(distinct
from
Γ
at
0
and boundary at
16/a
) and a dierent Jacobian signature (
{+4, +4, 8}/a
vs.
{8, 8, 8}/a
at
Γ
). The FCC spectrum is stratied; the SC spectrum is not.
The
BCC Brillouin zone is a rhombic dodecahedron with 12 face centers. Under
O
h
, these
form a single orbit; under antipodal identication they reduce to 6. The permutation
representation of
S
6
decomposes as
6 1 5
, giving no triplet; the group-theoretic
structure diers qualitatively from the FCC quartet. See [9] for BCC gauge theory.
Among the common 3D lattices (simple cubic, BCC, FCC), only FCC produces a
stratied spectrum with an isolated quartet, denite chiralities, and gappable boundary
modes. We have not exhaustively surveyed all possible 3D lattices.
8 Discussion
We outline directions for future work, noting that these are open questions rather than
predictions of the current analysis:
8
Minimum fermion content.
A Wilson term with
r = 1
gives the
L
-modes mass
12/a
and boundary modes
16/a
, leaving
Γ
massless (Table 1). In the continuum limit, the
heavy modes decouple, leaving a single massless speciesthe same outcome as hypercubic
Wilson fermions, achieved with a dierent doubler structure.
Retaining the quartet.
The anisotropic Wilson term in Section 6.1 demonstrates that
the singlettriplet splitting is real and computable. However, all
L
-modes remain at
the cuto scale (
1/a
). Retaining them at physical masses while gapping boundary
lines would require a momentum-dependent Wilson term. One could seek a momentum-
dependent Wilson term
w(k)
that is large at
X
and small at
L
. The function
w(k) =
P
µ
cos
2
(k
µ
)
satises this:
w(X) = 3
(since
cos
2
π + cos
2
0 + cos
2
0 = 3
) and
w(L) = 0
(since
cos
2
(π/2) = 0
). In position space,
cos
2
(k
µ
) = (1 + cos 2k
µ
)/2
, which corresponds
to on-site and next-nearest-neighbor couplingsa nite-range, local action. However, we
have not checked whether the resulting lattice action satises reection positivity, which
is the key constraint for a well-dened Euclidean eld theory. We ag this as a direction
for future investigation, not a concrete proposal.
Boundary nodal lines.
The continuous nodal lines carrying
χ
boundary
= +3
are a
regularization challenge with no hypercubic analogue. Domain-wall fermions [12] oer
a possible approach: if the FCC lattice can be embedded as the boundary of a higher-
dimensional lattice with a domain-wall mass termwhich is nontrivial, since the transfer
matrix structure on non-hypercubic bulk lattices has not been studiedthe
Γ
mode might
appear as a chiral zero mode on the wall. Overlap fermions would be another natural
approach. The key open question is whether any method can gap the nodal lines while
preserving the
L
-quartet.
9 Conclusion
The FCC lattice has a richer Dirac spectral structure than hypercubic lattices. The naive
Dirac operator yields a stratied zero-mode spectrumsinglet, isolated quartet, bound-
ary lines (completeness conjectured from numerical search)with chiralities
+1
(com-
puted),
4
(computed), and
+3
(winding-number computation), satisfying the Nielsen-
Ninomiya theorem:
+1 4 + 3 = 0
. The quartet decomposes under
O
=
S
4
as
4 1 3
,
with an explicit anisotropic Wilson term producing a
M = 4/a
singlettriplet splitting.
9
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10