
8 Discussion
Minimum fermion content. A standard Wilson term (r = 1) gives L-modes mass 12/a
and boundary modes mass 16/a, leaving Γ massless. In the continuum limit a → 0, heavy
modes decouple, yielding one massless species — no more species than the minimal staggered
construction, but achieved via a completely different mechanism.
Retaining the quartet. A momentum-dependent Wilson term w(k) =
P
µ
cos
2
(k
µ
) van-
ishes at L (cos
2
(π/2) = 0) and equals 3 at X (cos
2
(π) = 1), selectively gapping boundary
modes while preserving the L-quartet. Whether the resulting action satisfies reflection posi-
tivity is open.
Condensed matter applications. The 3D case is of direct interest for condensed matter
applications: FCC Weyl semimetals and topological insulators on non-cubic lattices [13]
benefit from the stratified spectrum and exact factorization derived here.
Extension to 4D. The 4D analog is the D
4
root lattice (24 nearest neighbors, 24-cell BZ).
Theorem 1 may generalize, but the case analysis is more involved.
9 Conclusion
The naive Dirac operator on the FCC lattice has a stratified zero-mode spectrum — Γ (singlet,
χ = +1), L (quartet, χ = −4), boundary nodal lines (χ = +3) — satisfying +1 − 4 + 3 = 0.
The kinetic field factorization (Theorem 1) proves the classification is complete. The L-
quartet decomposes as 1 ⊕ 3 under S
4
with explicit singlet-triplet splitting ∆M = 4/a.
This stratified structure — distinct masses, chiralities, and topological character across three
classes — is unique to the FCC lattice among common 3D lattices and is not equivalent to
staggered fermions on any hypercubic lattice.
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