- Topological quantum number
In
physics , a topological quantum number is any quantity, in a physical theory, that takes on only one of a discrete set of values, due to topological considerations. Most commonly, topological quantum numbers aretopological invariant s associated withtopological defect s orsoliton -type solutions of some set ofdifferential equation s modeling a physical system, as the solitons themselves owe their stability to topological considerations. The specific "topological considerations" are usually due to the appearance of thefundamental group or a higher-dimensionalhomotopy group in the description of the problem, quite often because the boundary, on which theboundary conditions are specified, has a non-trivial homotopy group that is preserved by the differential equations. The topological quantum number of a solution is sometimes called thewinding number of the solution, or, more precisely, it is thedegree of a continuous mapping .Recentwhen ideas about the nature of
phase transition s indicates that topological quantum numbers, and their associated solitons, can be created or destroyed during a phase transition.Fact|date=March 2008Particle physics
In
particle physics , an example is given by theSkyrmion , for which thebaryon number is a topological quantum number. The origin comes from the fact that theisospin is modelled bySU(2) , which is isomorphic to the3-sphere . By taking real three-dimensional space, and closing it with a point at infinity, one also gets a 3-sphere. Solutions to Skyrme's equations in real three dimensional space map a point in "real" (physical; Euclidean) space to a point on the 3-manifold SU(2). Topologically distinct solutions "wrap" the one sphere around the other, such that one solution, no matter how it is deformed, cannot be "unwrapped" without creating a discontinuity in the solution. In physics, such discontinuities are associated with infinite energy, and are thus not allowed.In the above example, the topological statement is that the 3rd homotopy group of the three sphere is
:
and so the baryon number can only take on integer values.
A generalization of these ideas is found in the
Wess-Zumino-Witten model .Exactly solvable models
Additional examples can be found in the domain of
exactly solvable model s, such as thesine-Gordon equation , theKorteweg–de Vries equation , and theIshimori equation . The one-dimensional sine-Gordon equation makes for a particularly simple example, as the fundamental group at play there is:
and so is literally a
winding number : a circle can be wrapped around a circle an integer number of times.olid state physics
In
solid state physics , certain types of crystallinedislocation s, such asscrew dislocation s, can be described by topological solitons. An example includes screw-type dislocations associated withGermanium whisker s.ee also
*
Inverse scattering transform
*Central charge
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.