A Short Guide to Anyons and Modular Functors
Abstract
To the working physicist, anyon theory is meant to describe certain quasi-particle excitations occurring in two dimensional topologically ordered systems. A typical calculation using this theory will involve operations such as to combine anyons, to re-associate such combinations, and to commute or braid these anyons. Although there is a powerful string-diagram notation that greatly assists these manipulations, we still appear to be operating on particles arranged on a one-dimensional line, algebraically ordered from left to right. The obvious question is, where is the other dimension? The topological framework for considering these anyons as truly living in a two dimensional space is known as a modular functor, or topological quantum field theory. In this work we show how the apparently one-dimensional algebraic anyon theory is secretly the theory of anyons living in a fully two-dimensional system. The mathematical literature covering this secret is vast, and we try to distill this down into something more manageable.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1610.05384,
title = {A Short Guide to Anyons and Modular Functors},
author = {Simon Burton},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1610.05384},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
16 pages