59 research outputs found
Inequivalent contact structures on Boothby-Wang 5-manifolds
We consider contact structures on simply-connected 5-manifolds which arise as
circle bundles over simply-connected symplectic 4-manifolds and show that
invariants from contact homology are related to the divisibility of the
canonical class of the symplectic structure. As an application we find new
examples of inequivalent contact structures in the same equivalence class of
almost contact structures with non-zero first Chern class.Comment: 27 pages; to appear in Math. Zeitschrif
Gauge-theoretic invariants for topological insulators: A bridge between Berry, Wess-Zumino, and Fu-Kane-Mele
We establish a connection between two recently-proposed approaches to the
understanding of the geometric origin of the Fu-Kane-Mele invariant
, arising in the context of 2-dimensional
time-reversal symmetric topological insulators. On the one hand, the
invariant can be formulated in terms of the Berry connection and
the Berry curvature of the Bloch bundle of occupied states over the Brillouin
torus. On the other, using techniques from the theory of bundle gerbes it is
possible to provide an expression for containing the square root
of the Wess-Zumino amplitude for a certain -valued field over the
Brillouin torus.
We link the two formulas by showing directly the equality between the above
mentioned Wess-Zumino amplitude and the Berry phase, as well as between their
square roots. An essential tool of independent interest is an equivariant
version of the adjoint Polyakov-Wiegmann formula for fields , of which we provide a proof employing only basic homotopy theory and
circumventing the language of bundle gerbes.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure. To appear in Letters in Mathematical Physic
A K-theoretical Invariant and Bifurcation for Homoclinics of Hamiltonian Systems
We revisit a K-theoretical invariant that was invented by the first author some years ago for studying multiparameter bifurcation of branches of critical points of functionals. Our main aim is to apply this invariant to investigate bifurcation of homoclinic solutions of families of Hamiltonian systems which are parametrised by tori
Symmetry breaking in dynamical systems
Symmetry breaking bifurcations and dynamical systems have obtained a lot of attention over the last years. This has several reasons: real world applications give rise to systems with symmetry, steady state solutions and periodic orbits may have interesting patterns, symmetry changes the notion of structural stability and introduces degeneracies into the systems as well as geometric simplifications. Therefore symmetric systems are attractive to those who study specific applications as well as to those who are interested in a the abstract theory of dynamical systems. Dynamical systems fall into two classes, those with continuous time and those with discrete time. In this paper we study only the continuous case, although the discrete case is as interesting as the continuous one. Many global results were obtained for the discrete case. Our emphasis are heteroclinic cycles and some mechanisms to create them. We do not pursue the question of stability. Of course many studies have been made to give conditions which imply the existence and stability of such cycles. In contrast to systems without symmetry heteroclinic cycles can be structurally stable in the symmetric case. Sometimes the various solutions on the cycle get mapped onto each other by group elements. Then this cycle will reduce to a homoclinic orbit if we project the equation onto the orbit space. Therefore techniques to study homoclinic bifurcations become available. In recent years some efforts have been made to understand the behaviour of dynamical systems near points where the symmetry of the system was perturbed by outside influences. This can lead to very complicated dynamical behaviour, as was pointed out by several authors. We will discuss some of the technical difficulties which arise in these problems. Then we will review some recent results on a geometric approach to this problem near steady state bifurcation points
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