
Spectral Structure of the Naive Dirac Operator
on the Face-Centered Cubic Lattice
Raghu Kulkarni
SSMTheory Group, IDrive Inc., Calabasas, CA 91302, USA
raghu@idrive.com
Abstract
We construct the naive Dirac operator on the Face-Centered Cubic (FCC) lattice
(
K = 12
) in three spatial dimensions. The kinetic vector eld factors exactly as
f
µ
(k) = 4 sin(k
µ
)[cos(k
ν
) + cos(k
ρ
)]
, where
(µ, ν, ρ)
is any permutation of
(1, 2, 3)
.
This factorization yields a complete, analytic classication of all zero modes: a
singlet at
Γ
, an isolated quartet at the four L-points, and nodal lines on the Brillouin
zone boundary. The Jacobian determinant assigns topological indices
χ
Γ
= +1
and
χ
L
= −1
(per point); a winding-number computation gives
χ = +1
per nodal loop,
with 3 independent loops. The Nielsen-Ninomiya sum
+1 − 4 + 3 = 0
is satised.
The L-point quartet transforms under the chiral octahedral group
O
∼
=
S
4
and
decomposes as
4 → 1 ⊕ 3
; an anisotropic Wilson term splits singlet from triplet with
∆M = 4/a
. The stratied spectrum three topological classes with distinct Wilson
masses (
0
,
12/a
,
16/a
) and distinct chiralities has no parallel on hypercubic
lattices, where all
2
3
= 8
doublers are geometrically equivalent.
1 Introduction
On a hypercubic lattice in
D
spatial dimensions, the naive Dirac operator produces
2
D
zero modes (fermion doublers), all geometrically equivalent [1, 2]. Wilson fermions [3] and
staggered fermions [4, 5] suppress or reduce these doublers at the cost of chiral symmetry
or fermion content.
The Face-Centered Cubic (FCC) lattice oers a dierent starting point. It is the densest
sphere packing in 3D [6], has coordination number
K = 12
, and possesses the full oc-
tahedral point group
O
h
. To our knowledge, the zero-mode structure of the naive Dirac
operator on the FCC lattice has not been systematically characterized.
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 condensed mat-
ter applications (Weyl semimetals, topological insulators on non-cubic lattices) and as a
testing ground for non-hypercubic constructions.
In this paper we prove a complete classication of all zero modes (Section 3), compute
chiralities at isolated zeros (Section 4), verify the Nielsen-Ninomiya theorem via winding-
1