We consider a mixture of a two-component Fermi gas and a single-component
dipolar Bose gas in a square optical lattice and reduce it into an effective
Fermi system where the Fermi-Fermi interaction includes the attractive
interaction induced by the phonons of a uniform dipolar Bose-Einstein
condensate. Focusing on this effective Fermi system in the parameter regime
that preserves the symmetry of D4, the point group of a square, we explore,
within the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov mean-field theory, the phase competition
among density wave orderings and superfluid pairings. We construct the matrix
representation of the linearized gap equation in the irreducible
representations of D4. We show that in the weak coupling regime, each matrix
element, which is a four-dimensional (4D) integral in momentum space, can be
put in a separable form involving a 1D integral, which is only a function of
temperature and the chemical potential, and a pairing-specific "effective"
interaction, which is an analytical function of the parameters that
characterize the Fermi-Fermi interactions in our system. We analyze the
critical temperatures of various competing orders as functions of different
system parameters in both the absence and presence of the dipolar interaction.
We find that close to half filling, the d_{x^{2}-y^{2}}-wave pairing with a
critical temperature in the order of a fraction of Fermi energy (at half
filling) may dominate all other phases, and at a higher filling factor, the
p-wave pairing with a critical temperature in the order of a hundredth of Fermi
energy may emerge as a winner. We find that tuning a dipolar interaction can
dramatically enhance the pairings with dxy- and g-wave symmetries but not
enough for them to dominate other competing phases.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure