
A substrate intended to support an emergent rotationally invariant continuum theory cannot
single out a spatial direction at the O(a
2
) correction level of its bulk dispersion. HCP fails this
requirement, FCC passes it (subject to the standard discrete cubic anisotropy expected of any
3D lattice). Of the two close-packed 3D lattices, only FCC is therefore a candidate for a
substrate of isotropic physical spacetime. In four dimensions the analogous question singles out
the D
4
root lattice, whose 24-cell first shell gives an exactly isotropic rank-4 bond tensor.
At the local defect-bound-mode level relevant to the rest of this paper, HCP’s reduced
symmetry has a different consequence. The combinatorial bond graphs K
4
at a tetrahedral void
and K
2,2,2
at an octahedral void are preserved (they are determined by which pairs of bounding
vertices sit at nearest-neighbor distance, which depends only on the local coordination), so the
matter-paper K
4
perfect-matching construction still defines a three-element color basis at an
HCP tetrahedral defect. The local point group at the voids, however, is reduced: from T
d
to a
C
3v
subgroup at a tetrahedral void, and from O
h
to D
3d
at an octahedral void. The bound-mode
multiplet decompositions split more finely under the reduced symmetry. The A
1
⊕T
2
structure
of Section 4 refines under T
d
→ C
3v
as A
1
⊕A
1
⊕E (dimensions 1 + 1 + 2), with the T
2
triplet
of FCC splitting into a C
3v
singlet plus doublet (T
2
→ A
1
⊕ E). The T
d
-degeneracy among
the three colors is lifted by the broken symmetry. Whether this HCP refinement is physically
interesting in its own right is a question we do not pursue here; HCP is not a candidate substrate
for the SSMTheory framework on the rank-4 isotropy grounds described above.
BCC: different coordination, no analog. Body-centered cubic has K = 8 with cubic first
shell. Tetrahedral voids in BCC exist but are distorted; the four bounding vertices are not at
equal nearest-neighbor distance from one another (the bonded graph of a tetrahedral void in
BCC is not K
4
), and the T
d
local symmetry is broken. The matter-paper K
4
perfect-matching
construction does not directly apply. Gauge fields on BCC were studied by Celmaster [13];
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
12