Quantum topology

Study of quantum mechanics through low-dimensional topology
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Quantum mechanics
i d d t | Ψ = H ^ | Ψ {\displaystyle i\hbar {\frac {d}{dt}}|\Psi \rangle ={\hat {H}}|\Psi \rangle }
Background
  • Hamiltonian
  • Interference
Fundamentals
  • Complementarity
  • Decoherence
  • Entanglement
  • Energy level
  • Measurement
  • Nonlocality
  • Quantum number
  • State
  • Superposition
  • Symmetry
  • Tunnelling
  • Uncertainty
  • Wave function
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Quantum topology is a branch of mathematics that connects quantum mechanics with low-dimensional topology.

Dirac notation provides a viewpoint of quantum mechanics which becomes amplified into a framework that can embrace the amplitudes associated with topological spaces and the related embedding of one space within another such as knots and links in three-dimensional space. This bra–ket notation of kets and bras can be generalised, becoming maps of vector spaces associated with topological spaces that allow tensor products.[1]

Topological entanglement involving linking and braiding can be intuitively related to quantum entanglement.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Kauffman, Louis H.; Baadhio, Randy A. (1993). Quantum Topology. River Edge, NJ: World Scientific. ISBN 981-02-1544-4.

External links

  • Quantum Topology, a journal published by EMS Publishing House
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