
the related fermion analysis on BCC, including whether a different local symmetry-based color
construction is available, is outside the scope of the present paper. The local structure of
FCC and HCP — not BCC or hypercubic Z
3
— is what supports the defect-bound-mode color
algebra.
Minimally doubled fermions. Karsten [6], Wilczek [7], and Boriçi–Creutz [8, 9] introduced
operators that produce exactly two continuum doublers, breaking hypercubic symmetry to
obstruct the doubling theorem. Bedaque, Buchoff, Tiburzi, and Walker-Loud [10] analyzed the
symmetry structure systematically. The modification is at the bulk-operator level. The defect
approach here is orthogonal: it leaves the bulk operator alone and looks at localized structure.
A future minimally-doubled construction on FCC could be combined with the defect analysis;
we do not undertake that here.
Supersymmetric lattices. Kaplan, Katz, and Ünsal [11] and Catterall [12] construct super-
symmetric lattice gauge theories on root lattices such as A
∗
4
, exploiting algebraic structure of
the root system to preserve part of the continuum supersymmetry. Defect-bound modes are not
in scope. The FCC lattice is the A
3
root lattice; a supersymmetric extension of the construction
here is consistent with these methods but is not pursued.
Wilson, staggered, twisted-mass. The standard hypercubic constructions [3, 4, 5] remove
or relabel doublers through mass terms, phase factors, or chirally rotated masses. All act on
the bulk operator on Z
D
. Staggered fermions on a 3D hypercubic lattice produce 4 tastes at the
eight cubic-BZ corners, all carrying Wilson mass 6/a. The FCC spectrum derived here has zeros
at the BZ interior (Γ, four L-points at (±π/2, ±π/2, ±π/2)) and on boundary nodal lines, with
three topological classes at three Wilson masses (0, 12/a, 16/a). The two Brillouin zones have
different shapes (truncated octahedron versus cube), and no linear change of lattice variables
maps one to the other while preserving the O
h
symmetry and nearest-neighbor structure. The
FCC operator is not a reparametrization of staggered fermions.
Lattice K First shell Point group Defect-mechanism status
Simple cubic (naive) 6 cube O
h
no analog (distorted tet void)
Simple cubic (staggered) 6 cube O
h
no analog
BCC (naive) 8 cube O
h
distorted tet void, K
4
broken [13]
HCP 12 anticuboctahedron D
3h
K
4
, K
2,2,2
preserved; reduced void symmetry; c-axis anisotropy
Minimally doubled varies varies varies bulk modification, no defect content
FCC (this work) 12 cuboctahedron O
h
K
4
, K
2,2,2
with full T
d
, O
h
at voids
Table 1: Comparison across common 3D lattices. Among the close-packed lattices, only FCC
has the cuboctahedral first shell that gives full O
h
symmetry without a preferred axis at the
rank-4 bond-tensor level. HCP shares the combinatorial bond graphs at its voids but breaks
isotropy along its c-axis at O(a
2
) in the bulk dispersion and reduces the local point group at
each void to a C
3v
or D
3d
subgroup. BCC has K
4
-broken tetrahedral voids and does not support
the matter-paper color construction directly.
FCC is uniquely selected by three independent criteria. A substrate compatible with
the matter-paper defect-and-color picture, with rotationally invariant continuum physics, and
with maximum-density packing must satisfy three requirements simultaneously: (i) full O
h
first-
shell symmetry, so the rank-4 bond tensor has no preferred axis beyond the standard discrete
cubic anisotropy of any 3D lattice; (ii) the K
4
bond graph at tetrahedral interstitial voids
and the K
2,2,2
bond graph at octahedral voids, so the matter-paper su(3) algebra on K
4
perfect
matchings is defined at the tetrahedral class; (iii) the maximum kissing number K = 12 in three
dimensions and the maximum Bravais sphere-packing density π/(3
√
2) ≈ 0.7405 established by
11