In general, a domain wall is a defect of codimension 1.
More specifically, in a gauge theory with a degenerate vacuum (such as when a Higgs mechanism applies), the moduli space of vacua is the quotient (the coset) of the gauge group by the stabilizer subgroup of any of these vacua (spontaneous symmetry breaking).
This means that gauge equivalence classes of vacuum configurations on a spacetime are given by homotopy classes of maps (where the notation on the right denotes the underlying homotopy type of the coset space, is the shape modality).
If spacetime is locally to be taken of the form , hence with a 1-dimensional (“wall”-like) piece taken out, them homotopy classes of maps are classified by the 0-th homotopy group . For a given nontrivial element here the corresponding vacuum is said to contain a domain wall defect.
For more see at QFT with defects the section Topological defects from spontaneously broken symmetry.
singularity | field theory with singularities |
---|---|
boundary condition/brane | boundary field theory |
domain wall/bi-brane | QFT with defects |
See also:
Last revised on January 24, 2024 at 15:38:39. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.