I recently came across some lattices which really interested me and, during my computations and trials, I've found one which seems equivalent to the D4 Checkerboard lattice.
I was looking to a similar lattice but with an higher packing radius, i.e.: $$\rho = 1$$
, while D4 is known to have $\rho = \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}$, like other Dn lattices.
I started taking all couples $$(\pm1^{4})$$
which currently are far from the origin exactly 2, i.e. can be all put in tangency with a unitary sphere centred in the origin. This actually gives us a kissing number of 16.
Knowing the highest kissing number in 4D is 24, I've tried to reach that threshold, adding some further vectors having form:$$(\pm2, 0^{3})$$
They are in tangency with the same unitary centred sphere in the origin, and they are kissing the other 16 spheres as well. Actually this lead to a total of 24 as kissing number, which is optimal in 4D.
I then tried to compute the packing density for this lattice. In 4D the generic formula reads:$$\Delta = \frac{\pi^{2}}{2}\rho^{4}\frac{1}{det(L_4)^{\frac12}}$$
, where $L_4$ is the lattice I'm taking into account. Looking to SPLAG, we can compute the generating matrix, which squared will lead to the lattice determinant. I've taken:$$M = \begin{matrix} 2 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \\ -1 & 1 & 1 & -1 \\ -1 & -1 & 1 & 1\end{matrix}$$
, which has $det(M) = 8$, leading to $det(L_4) = 64$. Putting all stuff together and taking $\rho=1$, we finally got: $$\Delta=\frac{\pi^{2}}{16}$$
Actually, this is exactly the same packing density we got from the densest D4. How this is possible? If I'm right, we raised the packing radius having an overall improvement due to it by $\sqrt{2}^{4}=4$ but at the same time we lowered the center density from $\frac12$ to $\frac18$, i.e. reducing by $\frac14$. So, this two 2 contributions cancel out, leading to the same packing density as D4.
The first question is: are my computations leading to meaningful results, from your POV?
After a while, I found a similar lattice in Thompson's From Error Correcting Codes through sphere packings to simple groups, precisely at page 73, quoting it:
One orientation of the densest lattice packing in $E^{4}$ has as sphere centers the set of all quadruples of either all even or all odd integers
The matrix is just another sequence of independent vectors similar to mine. Actually this explains also why we got a less dense center density, since $L_4$ lattice can be obtained extracting a subset of D4, with the rule pointed out by Thompson above.
The other two questions are:
does $L_4$ has a name? Actually it's not D4, even it has the same density and kissing number.
Does $L_4$ can be obtained by a transformation of D4? I've seen in SPLAG, pag. 10, a lattice can be defined equivalent or similar if the two generator matrix can be put in this relation: $$M^{`} = c U M B$$
, where c is a nonzero constant, U is a matrix with integer entries and $det(U) = \pm1$ and B is an orthogonal matrix. More than this, if c=1 they can be called congrunet lattices.
Actually, given the density and the kissing numbers I'm conjecturing they are equivalent, or even congruent, but I'm not able to find those matrices and constant to prove this. Can you give me any hint with this, please?
Thank for your support