Abstract:
Topological methods play an important role in the theory of solid states. They were successfully
applied to the theory of insulators characterized by a wide energy gap stable under small deformations.
The availability of such gap is also important for the theory of topological phases.
To define the topological phases denote by G the symmetry group and
consider the set HamG of homotopy equivalence classes of G-symmetric Hamiltonians
satisfying the energy gap condition. It is possible to introduce a natural stacking operation
on this set making HamG into Abelian monoid (i.e. Abelian semigroup with neutral element).
The group of invertible elements of this monoid is precisely the topological phase.
It turns out that the family (Fd) of d-dimensional topological phases forms an Ω-spectrum.
By this we mean a collection of topological spaces Fd having the property that the loop space
ΩFd+1 is homotopy equivalent to the space Fd. Every Ω-spectrum generates
a generalized cohomology theory determined by the functor hd, associating with the
topological space X the set [X,Fd] of homotopy equivalence classes of the maps X→Fd.
We give several examples of concrete physical systems which can be described in terms of generalized
cohomology theories.
We also discuss relations between topological phases and K-theory. The K-functor is defined using the
spectral flattening of Hamiltonians and can be computed in a series of important examples.