
Abstract
We investigate the spectral characteristics of the naive discrete Dirac operator on a Face-Centered Cubic
(FCC) lattice in D = 3 spatial dimensions. While standard hypercubic lattices are notorious for generating
2
3
= 8 fermion doublers at the Brillouin Zone corners, the FCC lattice offers a richer, non-trivial spectral
geometry shaped by its Truncated Octahedron Brillouin zone. By explicitly deriving the dispersion relation,
we map the complete set of zero modes. Our analysis reveals a distinct topological structure: exactly four
isolated zero modes reside in the zone interior (at the L-points), while a continuous family of zeros forms
nodal lines along the boundary connecting the X and W points. Calculating the Jacobian determinant
allows us to assign chiralities to the isolated modes: the fundamental Γ-mode (χ = +1) is balanced by the
four L-modes (χ = −1 each). To satisfy the Nielsen-Ninomiya theorem, the boundary nodal lines must
therefore carry a net chirality of +3. We conclude by discussing the decomposition of the L-point quartet
under the tetrahedral group S
4
, showing how it naturally splits into a singlet and a triplet (4 → 1 ⊕ 3)—a
geometric feature that suggests a novel mechanism for generating flavor structures in lattice gauge theories.
I. INTRODUCTION
Putting fermions on a lattice has always been a messy business. The naive discretization of
the Dirac equation runs headlong into the doubling problem: on a simple hypercubic grid in D
dimensions, replacing derivatives with finite differences generates 2
D
fermion species [1, 2]. In three
spatial dimensions, this means getting eight particles for the price of one, crowding the corners of
the cubic Brillouin zone.
Physicists have developed clever ways to suppress these artifacts—Wilson fermions [3] break
chiral symmetry to give the doublers infinite mass, while Staggered fermions [4, 5] accept a smaller
number of doublers in exchange for remnant chiral symmetry. Yet, these solutions usually involve
tweaking the operator or the fields, rather than rethinking the geometry of the space itself.
Ideally, one should look at non-hypercubic lattices. The Face-Centered Cubic (FCC) lattice is
particularly interesting because it represents the tightest possible way to pack spheres in 3D (the
Kepler conjecture) and boasts the highest possible point group symmetry (O
h
). While gauge fields
on Body-Centered Cubic (BCC) lattices have seen some study [8], the behavior of fermions on the
reciprocal FCC lattice remains largely unexplored.
In this Letter, we map out the naive Dirac operator on an FCC lattice. We find that the
geometry itself breaks the degeneracy typical of hypercubic doublers. Instead of clustering at
∗
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2