It has recently been realized that a general class of non-abelian defects can
be created in conventional topological states by introducing extrinsic defects,
such as lattice dislocations or superconductor-ferromagnet domain walls in
conventional quantum Hall states or topological insulators. In this paper, we
begin by placing these defects within the broader conceptual scheme of
extrinsic twist defects associated with symmetries of the topological state. We
explicitly study several classes of examples, including Z2 and Z3 twist
defects, where the topological state with N twist defects can be mapped to a
topological state without twist defects on a genus g∝N surface. To
emphasize this connection we refer to the twist defects as genons. We develop
methods to compute the projective non-abelian braiding statistics of the
genons, and we find the braiding is given by adiabatic modular transformations,
or Dehn twists, of the topological state on the effective genus g surface. We
study the relation between this projective braiding statistics and the ordinary
non-abelian braiding statistics obtained when the genons become deconfined,
finite-energy excitations. We find that the braiding is generally different, in
contrast to the Majorana case, which opens the possibility for fundamentally
novel behavior. We find situations where the genons have quantum dimension 2
and can be used for universal topological quantum computing (TQC), while the
host topological state is by itself non-universal for TQC.Comment: 26 pages, 18 Figures . v2: added references, modified universal TQC
section, and other minor clarifications throughout the pape