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Topological order

In physics, topological order[1] is a kind of order in the zero-temperature phase of matter (also known as quantum matter). Macroscopically, topological order is defined and described by robust ground state degeneracy[2] and quantized non-Abelian geometric phases of degenerate ground states.[1] Microscopically, topological orders correspond to patterns of long-range quantum entanglement.[3] States with different topological orders (or different patterns of long range entanglements) cannot change into each other without a phase transition.

Various topologically ordered states have interesting properties, such as (1) topological degeneracy and fractional statistics or non-Abelian statistics that can be used to realize a topological quantum computer; (2) perfect conducting edge states that may have important device applications; (3) emergent gauge field and Fermi statistics that suggest a quantum information origin of elementary particles;[4] (4) topological entanglement entropy that reveals the entanglement origin of topological order, etc. Topological order is important in the study of several physical systems such as spin liquids,[5][6][7][8] and the quantum Hall effect,[9][10] along with potential applications to fault-tolerant quantum computation.[11]

Topological insulators[12] and topological superconductors (beyond 1D) do not have topological order as defined above, their entanglements being only short-ranged, but are examples of symmetry-protected topological order.

Background edit

Matter composed of atoms can have different properties and appear in different forms, such as solid, liquid, superfluid, etc. These various forms of matter are often called states of matter or phases. According to condensed matter physics and the principle of emergence, the different properties of materials generally arise from the different ways in which the atoms are organized in the materials. Those different organizations of the atoms (or other particles) are formally called the orders in the materials.[13]

Atoms can organize in many ways which lead to many different orders and many different types of materials. Landau symmetry-breaking theory provides a general understanding of these different orders. It points out that different orders really correspond to different symmetries in the organizations of the constituent atoms. As a material changes from one order to another order (i.e., as the material undergoes a phase transition), what happens is that the symmetry of the organization of the atoms changes.

For example, atoms have a random distribution in a liquid, so a liquid remains the same as we displace atoms by an arbitrary distance. We say that a liquid has a continuous translation symmetry. After a phase transition, a liquid can turn into a crystal. In a crystal, atoms organize into a regular array (a lattice). A lattice remains unchanged only when we displace it by a particular distance (integer times a lattice constant), so a crystal has only discrete translation symmetry. The phase transition between a liquid and a crystal is a transition that reduces the continuous translation symmetry of the liquid to the discrete symmetry of the crystal. Such a change in symmetry is called symmetry breaking. The essence of the difference between liquids and crystals is therefore that the organizations of atoms have different symmetries in the two phases.

Landau symmetry-breaking theory has been a very successful theory. For a long time, physicists believed that Landau Theory described all possible orders in materials, and all possible (continuous) phase transitions.

Discovery and characterization edit

However, since the late 1980s, it has become gradually apparent that Landau symmetry-breaking theory may not describe all possible orders. In an attempt to explain high temperature superconductivity[14] the chiral spin state was introduced.[5][6] At first, physicists still wanted to use Landau symmetry-breaking theory to describe the chiral spin state. They identified the chiral spin state as a state that breaks the time reversal and parity symmetries, but not the spin rotation symmetry. This should be the end of the story according to Landau's symmetry breaking description of orders. However, it was quickly realized that there are many different chiral spin states that have exactly the same symmetry, so symmetry alone was not enough to characterize different chiral spin states. This means that the chiral spin states contain a new kind of order that is beyond the usual symmetry description.[15] The proposed, new kind of order was named "topological order".[1] The name "topological order" is motivated by the low energy effective theory of the chiral spin states which is a topological quantum field theory (TQFT).[16][17][18] New quantum numbers, such as ground state degeneracy[15] (which can be defined on a closed space or an open space with gapped boundaries, including both Abelian topological orders [19][20] and non-Abelian topological orders[21][22]) and the non-Abelian geometric phase of degenerate ground states,[1] were introduced to characterize and define the different topological orders in chiral spin states. More recently, it was shown that topological orders can also be characterized by topological entropy.[23][24]

But experiments[which?] soon indicated[how?] that chiral spin states do not describe high-temperature superconductors, and the theory of topological order became a theory with no experimental realization. However, the similarity between chiral spin states and quantum Hall states allows one to use the theory of topological order to describe different quantum Hall states.[2] Just like chiral spin states, different quantum Hall states all have the same symmetry and are outside the Landau symmetry-breaking description. One finds that the different orders in different quantum Hall states can indeed be described by topological orders, so the topological order does have experimental realizations.

The fractional quantum Hall (FQH) state was discovered in 1982[9][10] before the introduction of the concept of topological order in 1989. But the FQH state is not the first experimentally discovered topologically ordered state. The superconductor, discovered in 1911, is the first experimentally discovered topologically ordered state; it has Z2 topological order.[notes 1]

Although topologically ordered states usually appear in strongly interacting boson/fermion systems, a simple kind of topological order can also appear in free fermion systems. This kind of topological order corresponds to integral quantum Hall state, which can be characterized by the Chern number of the filled energy band if we consider integer quantum Hall state on a lattice. Theoretical calculations have proposed that such Chern numbers can be measured for a free fermion system experimentally.[28][29] It is also well known that such a Chern number can be measured (maybe indirectly) by edge states.

The most important characterization of topological orders would be the underlying fractionalized excitations (such as anyons) and their fusion statistics and braiding statistics (which can go beyond the quantum statistics of bosons or fermions). Current research works show that the loop and string like excitations exist for topological orders in the 3+1 dimensional spacetime, and their multi-loop/string-braiding statistics are the crucial signatures for identifying 3+1 dimensional topological orders. [30][31][32] The multi-loop/string-braiding statistics of 3+1 dimensional topological orders can be captured by the link invariants of particular topological quantum field theory in 4 spacetime dimensions.[32]

Mechanism edit

A large class of 2+1D topological orders is realized through a mechanism called string-net condensation.[33] This class of topological orders can have a gapped edge and are classified by unitary fusion category (or monoidal category) theory. One finds that string-net condensation can generate infinitely many different types of topological orders, which may indicate that there are many different new types of materials remaining to be discovered.

The collective motions of condensed strings give rise to excitations above the string-net condensed states. Those excitations turn out to be gauge bosons. The ends of strings are defects which correspond to another type of excitations. Those excitations are the gauge charges and can carry Fermi or fractional statistics.[34]

The condensations of other extended objects such as "membranes",[35] "brane-nets",[36] and fractals also lead to topologically ordered phases[37] and "quantum glassiness".[38][39]

Mathematical formulation edit

We know that group theory is the mathematical foundation of symmetry-breaking orders. What is the mathematical foundation of topological order? It was found that a subclass of 2+1D topological orders—Abelian topological orders—can be classified by a K-matrix approach.[40][41][42][43] The string-net condensation suggests that tensor category (such as fusion category or monoidal category) is part of the mathematical foundation of topological order in 2+1D. The more recent researches suggest that (up to invertible topological orders that have no fractionalized excitations):

  • 2+1D bosonic topological orders are classified by unitary modular tensor categories.
  • 2+1D bosonic topological orders with symmetry G are classified by G-crossed tensor categories.
  • 2+1D bosonic/fermionic topological orders with symmetry G are classified by unitary braided fusion categories over symmetric fusion category, that has modular extensions. The symmetric fusion category Rep(G) for bosonic systems and sRep(G) for fermionic systems.

Topological order in higher dimensions may be related to n-Category theory. Quantum operator algebra is a very important mathematical tool in studying topological orders.

Some also suggest that topological order is mathematically described by extended quantum symmetry.[44]

Applications edit

The materials described by Landau symmetry-breaking theory have had a substantial impact on technology. For example, ferromagnetic materials that break spin rotation symmetry can be used as the media of digital information storage. A hard drive made of ferromagnetic materials can store gigabytes of information. Liquid crystals that break the rotational symmetry of molecules find wide application in display technology. Crystals that break translation symmetry lead to well defined electronic bands which in turn allow us to make semiconducting devices such as transistors. Different types of topological orders are even richer than different types of symmetry-breaking orders. This suggests their potential for exciting, novel applications.

One theorized application would be to use topologically ordered states as media for quantum computing in a technique known as topological quantum computing. A topologically ordered state is a state with complicated non-local quantum entanglement. The non-locality means that the quantum entanglement in a topologically ordered state is distributed among many different particles. As a result, the pattern of quantum entanglements cannot be destroyed by local perturbations. This significantly reduces the effect of decoherence. This suggests that if we use different quantum entanglements in a topologically ordered state to encode quantum information, the information may last much longer.[45] The quantum information encoded by the topological quantum entanglements can also be manipulated by dragging the topological defects around each other. This process may provide a physical apparatus for performing quantum computations.[46] Therefore, topologically ordered states may provide natural media for both quantum memory and quantum computation. Such realizations of quantum memory and quantum computation may potentially be made fault tolerant.[11]

Topologically ordered states in general have a special property that they contain non-trivial boundary states. In many cases, those boundary states become perfect conducting channel that can conduct electricity without generating heat.[47] This can be another potential application of topological order in electronic devices.

Similarly to topological order, topological insulators[48][49] also have gapless boundary states. The boundary states of topological insulators play a key role in the detection and the application of topological insulators. This observation naturally leads to a question: are topological insulators examples of topologically ordered states? In fact topological insulators are different from topologically ordered states defined in this article. Topological insulators only have short-ranged entanglements and have no topological order, while the topological order defined in this article is a pattern of long-range entanglement. Topological order is robust against any perturbations. It has emergent gauge theory, emergent fractional charge and fractional statistics. In contrast, topological insulators are robust only against perturbations that respect time-reversal and U(1) symmetries. Their quasi-particle excitations have no fractional charge and fractional statistics. Strictly speaking, topological insulator is an example of symmetry-protected topological (SPT) order,[50] where the first example of SPT order is the Haldane phase of spin-1 chain.[51][52][53][54] But the Haldane phase of spin-2 chain has no SPT order.

Potential impact edit

Landau symmetry-breaking theory is a cornerstone of condensed matter physics. It is used to define the territory of condensed matter research. The existence of topological order appears to indicate that nature is much richer than Landau symmetry-breaking theory has so far indicated. So topological order opens up a new direction in condensed matter physics—a new direction of highly entangled quantum matter. We realize that quantum phases of matter (i.e. the zero-temperature phases of matter) can be divided into two classes: long range entangled states and short range entangled states.[3] Topological order is the notion that describes the long range entangled states: topological order = pattern of long range entanglements. Short range entangled states are trivial in the sense that they all belong to one phase. However, in the presence of symmetry, even short range entangled states are nontrivial and can belong to different phases. Those phases are said to contain SPT order.[50] SPT order generalizes the notion of topological insulator to interacting systems.

Some suggest that topological order (or more precisely, string-net condensation) in local bosonic (spin) models have the potential to provide a unified origin for photons, electrons and other elementary particles in our universe.[4]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Note that superconductivity can be described by the Ginzburg–Landau theory with dynamical U(1) EM gauge field, which is a Z2 gauge theory, that is, an effective theory of Z2 topological order. The prediction of the vortex state in superconductors was one of the main successes of Ginzburg–Landau theory with dynamical U(1) gauge field. The vortex in the gauged Ginzburg–Landau theory is nothing but the Z2 flux line in the Z2 gauge theory. The Ginzburg–Landau theory without the dynamical U(1) gauge field fails to describe the real superconductors with dynamical electromagnetic interaction.[8][25][26][27] However, in condensed matter physics, superconductor usually refers to a state with non-dynamical EM gauge field. Such a state is a symmetry breaking state with no topological order.

References edit

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References by categories edit

Fractional quantum Hall states edit

  • Tsui, D. C.; Stormer, H. L.; Gossard, A. C. (1982). "Two-Dimensional Magnetotransport in the Extreme Quantum Limit". Phys. Rev. Lett. 48 (22): 1559–62. Bibcode:1982PhRvL..48.1559T. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.48.1559.
  • Laughlin, R. B. (1983). "Anomalous Quantum Hall Effect: An Incompressible Quantum Fluid with Fractionally Charged Excitations". Phys. Rev. Lett. 50 (18): 1395–98. Bibcode:1983PhRvL..50.1395L. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.50.1395. S2CID 120080343.

Chiral spin states edit

  • Kalmeyer, V.; Laughlin, R. B. (2 November 1987). "Equivalence of the resonating-valence-bond and fractional quantum Hall states". Physical Review Letters. 59 (18): 2095–8. Bibcode:1987PhRvL..59.2095K. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.59.2095. PMID 10035416.
  • Wen, X. G.; Wilczek, Frank; Zee, A. (1 June 1989). "Chiral spin states and superconductivity". Physical Review B. 39 (16): 11413–23. Bibcode:1989PhRvB..3911413W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.39.11413. PMID 9947970.

Early characterization of FQH states edit

  • Off-diagonal long-range order, oblique confinement, and the fractional quantum Hall effect, S. M. Girvin and A. H. MacDonald, Phys. Rev. Lett., 58, 1252 (1987)
  • Effective-Field-Theory Model for the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect, S. C. Zhang and T. H. Hansson and S. Kivelson, Phys. Rev. Lett., 62, 82 (1989)

Topological order edit

  • Xiao-Gang Wen, Phys. Rev. B, 40, 7387 (1989), "Vacuum Degeneracy of Chiral Spin State in Compactified Spaces"
  • Wen, Xiao-Gang (1990). (PDF). Int. J. Mod. Phys. B. 4 (2): 239. Bibcode:1990IJMPB...4..239W. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.676.4078. doi:10.1142/S0217979290000139. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  • Xiao-Gang Wen, Quantum Field Theory of Many Body Systems – From the Origin of Sound to an Origin of Light and Electrons, Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford, 2004.

Characterization of topological order edit

  • D. Arovas and J. R. Schrieffer and F. Wilczek, Phys. Rev. Lett., 53, 722 (1984), "Fractional Statistics and the Quantum Hall Effect"
  • Wen, Xiao-Gang; Niu, Qian (1990). "Ground state degeneracy of the FQH states in presence of random potential and on high genus Riemann surfaces" (PDF). Phys. Rev. B. 41 (13): 9377–96. Bibcode:1990PhRvB..41.9377W. doi:10.1103/physrevb.41.9377. PMID 9993283.
  • Wen, Xiao-Gang (1991a). "Gapless Boundary Excitations in the FQH States and in the Chiral Spin States" (PDF). Phys. Rev. B. 43 (13): 11025–36. Bibcode:1991PhRvB..4311025W. doi:10.1103/physrevb.43.11025. PMID 9996836.
  • Kitaev, Alexei; Preskill, John (24 March 2006). "Topological Entanglement Entropy". Physical Review Letters. 96 (11): 110404. arXiv:hep-th/0510092. Bibcode:2006PhRvL..96k0404K. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.96.110404. PMID 16605802. S2CID 18480266.
  • Levin, Michael; Wen, Xiao-Gang (24 March 2006). "Detecting Topological Order in a Ground State Wave Function". Physical Review Letters. 96 (11): 110405. arXiv:cond-mat/0510613. Bibcode:2006PhRvL..96k0405L. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.96.110405. PMID 16605803. S2CID 206329868.

Effective theory of topological order edit

  • Witten, E. (1989). "Quantum field theory and the Jones polynomial". Comm. Math. Phys. 121 (3): 351–399. Bibcode:1989CMaPh.121..351W. doi:10.1007/bf01217730. MR 0990772. S2CID 14951363. Zbl 0667.57005.

Mechanism of topological order edit

  • Levin, Michael A.; Wen, Xiao-Gang (12 January 2005). "String-net condensation: A physical mechanism for topological phases". Physical Review B. 71 (4): 045110. arXiv:cond-mat/0404617. Bibcode:2005PhRvB..71d5110L. doi:10.1103/physrevb.71.045110. S2CID 51962817.
  • Chamon, C (2005). "Quantum Glassiness in Strongly Correlated Clean Systems: An Example of Topological Overprotection". Phys. Rev. Lett. 94 (4): 040402. arXiv:cond-mat/0404182. Bibcode:2005PhRvL..94d0402C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.94.040402. PMID 15783534. S2CID 25731669.
  • Hamma, Alioscia; Zanardi, Paolo; Wen, Xiao-Gang (2005). "String and Membrane condensation on 3D lattices". Phys. Rev. B. 72 (3): 035307. arXiv:cond-mat/0411752. Bibcode:2005PhRvB..72c5307H. doi:10.1103/physrevb.72.035307. S2CID 118956379.
  • Bombin, H.; Martin-Delgado, M. A. (7 February 2007). "Exact topological quantum order inD=3and beyond: Branyons and brane-net condensates". Physical Review B. 75 (7): 075103. arXiv:cond-mat/0607736. Bibcode:2007PhRvB..75g5103B. doi:10.1103/physrevb.75.075103. S2CID 119460756.

Quantum computing edit

  • Nayak, Chetan; Simon, Steven H.; Stern, Ady; Freedman, Michael; Das Sarma, Sankar (2008). "Non-Abelian anyons and topological quantum computation". Reviews of Modern Physics. 80 (3): 1083–1159. arXiv:0707.1889. Bibcode:2008RvMP...80.1083N. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.80.1083.
  • Kitaev, Alexei Yu (2003). "Fault-tolerant quantum computation by anyons". Annals of Physics. 303 (1): 2–30. arXiv:quant-ph/9707021. Bibcode:2003AnPhy.303....2K. doi:10.1016/S0003-4916(02)00018-0. S2CID 119087885.
  • Freedman, Michael H.; Kitaev, Alexei; Larsen, Michael J.; Wang, Zhenghan (2003). "Topological quantum computation". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 40: 31. arXiv:quant-ph/0101025. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-02-00964-3.
  • Dennis, Eric; Kitaev, Alexei; Landahl, Andrew; Preskill, John (2002). "Topological quantum memory". J. Math. Phys. 43 (9): 4452–4505. arXiv:quant-ph/0110143. Bibcode:2002JMP....43.4452D. doi:10.1063/1.1499754. S2CID 36673677.
  • Ady Stern and Bertrand I. Halperin, Phys. Rev. Lett., 96, 016802 (2006), Proposed Experiments to probe the Non-Abelian nu=5/2 Quantum Hall State

Emergence of elementary particles edit

  • Xiao-Gang Wen, Phys. Rev. D68, 024501 (2003), Quantum order from string-net condensations and origin of light and massless fermions
  • Levin, Michael; Wen, Xiao-Gang (20 June 2003). "Fermions, strings, and gauge fields in lattice spin models". Physical Review B. 67 (24): 245316. arXiv:cond-mat/0302460. Bibcode:2003PhRvB..67x5316L. doi:10.1103/physrevb.67.245316. S2CID 29180411.
  • Levin, Michael; Wen, Xiao-Gang (2005a). "Colloquium: Photons and electrons as emergent phenomena". Reviews of Modern Physics. 77 (3): 871–9. arXiv:cond-mat/0407140. Bibcode:2005RvMP...77..871L. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.77.871. S2CID 117563047. See also Levin, Michael; Wen, Xiao-Gang (2006a). "Quantum ether: Photons and electrons from a rotor model". Physical Review B. 73 (3): 035122. arXiv:hep-th/0507118. Bibcode:2006PhRvB..73c5122L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.73.035122. S2CID 119481786.
  • Zheng-Cheng Gu and Xiao-Gang Wen, gr-qc/0606100, A lattice bosonic model as a quantum theory of gravity,

Quantum operator algebra edit

  • Yetter, David N. (1993). "TQFT'S from Homotopy 2-Types". Journal of Knot Theory and Its Ramifications. 2 (1): 113–123. doi:10.1142/s0218216593000076.
  • Landsman N. P. and Ramazan B., Quantization of Poisson algebras associated to Lie algebroids, in Proc. Conf. on Groupoids in Physics, Analysis and Geometry(Boulder CO, 1999)', Editors J. Kaminker et al.,159{192 Contemp. Math. 282, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence RI, 2001, (also math{ph/001005.)
  • Non-Abelian Quantum Algebraic Topology (NAQAT) 20 Nov. (2008),87 pages, Baianu, I.C.
  • Levin A. and Olshanetsky M., Hamiltonian Algebroids and deformations of complex structures on Riemann curves, hep-th/0301078v1.
  • Xiao-Gang Wen, Yong-Shi Wu and Y. Hatsugai., Chiral operator product algebra and edge excitations of a FQH droplet (pdf),Nucl. Phys. B422, 476 (1994): Used chiral operator product algebra to construct the bulk wave function, characterize the topological orders and calculate the edge states for some non-Abelian FQH states.
  • Xiao-Gang Wen and Yong-Shi Wu., Chiral operator product algebra hidden in certain FQH states (pdf),Nucl. Phys. B419, 455 (1994): Demonstrated that non-Abelian topological orders are closely related to chiral operator product algebra (instead of conformal field theory).
  • Non-Abelian theory.
  • Baianu, I. C. (2007). "A Non-Abelian, Categorical Ontology of Spacetimes and Quantum Gravity". Axiomathes. 17 (3–4): 353–408. doi:10.1007/s10516-007-9012-1. S2CID 3909409..
  • R. Brown, P.J. Higgins, P. J. and R. Sivera, "Nonabelian Algebraic Topology: filtered spaces, crossed complexes, cubical homotopy groupoids" EMS Tracts in Mathematics Vol 15 (2011),
  • Quantum Algebraic Topology (QAT)[permanent dead link]

topological, order, this, article, about, quantum, physics, graph, theoretical, concept, topological, sort, physics, topological, order, kind, order, zero, temperature, phase, matter, also, known, quantum, matter, macroscopically, topological, order, defined, . This article is about quantum physics For the graph theoretical concept see Topological sort In physics topological order 1 is a kind of order in the zero temperature phase of matter also known as quantum matter Macroscopically topological order is defined and described by robust ground state degeneracy 2 and quantized non Abelian geometric phases of degenerate ground states 1 Microscopically topological orders correspond to patterns of long range quantum entanglement 3 States with different topological orders or different patterns of long range entanglements cannot change into each other without a phase transition Various topologically ordered states have interesting properties such as 1 topological degeneracy and fractional statistics or non Abelian statistics that can be used to realize a topological quantum computer 2 perfect conducting edge states that may have important device applications 3 emergent gauge field and Fermi statistics that suggest a quantum information origin of elementary particles 4 4 topological entanglement entropy that reveals the entanglement origin of topological order etc Topological order is important in the study of several physical systems such as spin liquids 5 6 7 8 and the quantum Hall effect 9 10 along with potential applications to fault tolerant quantum computation 11 Topological insulators 12 and topological superconductors beyond 1D do not have topological order as defined above their entanglements being only short ranged but are examples of symmetry protected topological order Contents 1 Background 2 Discovery and characterization 3 Mechanism 4 Mathematical formulation 5 Applications 6 Potential impact 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 References by categories 10 1 Fractional quantum Hall states 10 2 Chiral spin states 10 3 Early characterization of FQH states 10 4 Topological order 10 5 Characterization of topological order 10 6 Effective theory of topological order 10 7 Mechanism of topological order 10 8 Quantum computing 10 9 Emergence of elementary particles 10 10 Quantum operator algebraBackground editMatter composed of atoms can have different properties and appear in different forms such as solid liquid superfluid etc These various forms of matter are often called states of matter or phases According to condensed matter physics and the principle of emergence the different properties of materials generally arise from the different ways in which the atoms are organized in the materials Those different organizations of the atoms or other particles are formally called the orders in the materials 13 Atoms can organize in many ways which lead to many different orders and many different types of materials Landau symmetry breaking theory provides a general understanding of these different orders It points out that different orders really correspond to different symmetries in the organizations of the constituent atoms As a material changes from one order to another order i e as the material undergoes a phase transition what happens is that the symmetry of the organization of the atoms changes For example atoms have a random distribution in a liquid so a liquid remains the same as we displace atoms by an arbitrary distance We say that a liquid has a continuous translation symmetry After a phase transition a liquid can turn into a crystal In a crystal atoms organize into a regular array a lattice A lattice remains unchanged only when we displace it by a particular distance integer times a lattice constant so a crystal has only discrete translation symmetry The phase transition between a liquid and a crystal is a transition that reduces the continuous translation symmetry of the liquid to the discrete symmetry of the crystal Such a change in symmetry is called symmetry breaking The essence of the difference between liquids and crystals is therefore that the organizations of atoms have different symmetries in the two phases Landau symmetry breaking theory has been a very successful theory For a long time physicists believed that Landau Theory described all possible orders in materials and all possible continuous phase transitions Discovery and characterization editHowever since the late 1980s it has become gradually apparent that Landau symmetry breaking theory may not describe all possible orders In an attempt to explain high temperature superconductivity 14 the chiral spin state was introduced 5 6 At first physicists still wanted to use Landau symmetry breaking theory to describe the chiral spin state They identified the chiral spin state as a state that breaks the time reversal and parity symmetries but not the spin rotation symmetry This should be the end of the story according to Landau s symmetry breaking description of orders However it was quickly realized that there are many different chiral spin states that have exactly the same symmetry so symmetry alone was not enough to characterize different chiral spin states This means that the chiral spin states contain a new kind of order that is beyond the usual symmetry description 15 The proposed new kind of order was named topological order 1 The name topological order is motivated by the low energy effective theory of the chiral spin states which is a topological quantum field theory TQFT 16 17 18 New quantum numbers such as ground state degeneracy 15 which can be defined on a closed space or an open space with gapped boundaries including both Abelian topological orders 19 20 and non Abelian topological orders 21 22 and the non Abelian geometric phase of degenerate ground states 1 were introduced to characterize and define the different topological orders in chiral spin states More recently it was shown that topological orders can also be characterized by topological entropy 23 24 But experiments which soon indicated how that chiral spin states do not describe high temperature superconductors and the theory of topological order became a theory with no experimental realization However the similarity between chiral spin states and quantum Hall states allows one to use the theory of topological order to describe different quantum Hall states 2 Just like chiral spin states different quantum Hall states all have the same symmetry and are outside the Landau symmetry breaking description One finds that the different orders in different quantum Hall states can indeed be described by topological orders so the topological order does have experimental realizations The fractional quantum Hall FQH state was discovered in 1982 9 10 before the introduction of the concept of topological order in 1989 But the FQH state is not the first experimentally discovered topologically ordered state The superconductor discovered in 1911 is the first experimentally discovered topologically ordered state it has Z2 topological order notes 1 Although topologically ordered states usually appear in strongly interacting boson fermion systems a simple kind of topological order can also appear in free fermion systems This kind of topological order corresponds to integral quantum Hall state which can be characterized by the Chern number of the filled energy band if we consider integer quantum Hall state on a lattice Theoretical calculations have proposed that such Chern numbers can be measured for a free fermion system experimentally 28 29 It is also well known that such a Chern number can be measured maybe indirectly by edge states The most important characterization of topological orders would be the underlying fractionalized excitations such as anyons and their fusion statistics and braiding statistics which can go beyond the quantum statistics of bosons or fermions Current research works show that the loop and string like excitations exist for topological orders in the 3 1 dimensional spacetime and their multi loop string braiding statistics are the crucial signatures for identifying 3 1 dimensional topological orders 30 31 32 The multi loop string braiding statistics of 3 1 dimensional topological orders can be captured by the link invariants of particular topological quantum field theory in 4 spacetime dimensions 32 Mechanism editA large class of 2 1D topological orders is realized through a mechanism called string net condensation 33 This class of topological orders can have a gapped edge and are classified by unitary fusion category or monoidal category theory One finds that string net condensation can generate infinitely many different types of topological orders which may indicate that there are many different new types of materials remaining to be discovered The collective motions of condensed strings give rise to excitations above the string net condensed states Those excitations turn out to be gauge bosons The ends of strings are defects which correspond to another type of excitations Those excitations are the gauge charges and can carry Fermi or fractional statistics 34 The condensations of other extended objects such as membranes 35 brane nets 36 and fractals also lead to topologically ordered phases 37 and quantum glassiness 38 39 Mathematical formulation editWe know that group theory is the mathematical foundation of symmetry breaking orders What is the mathematical foundation of topological order It was found that a subclass of 2 1D topological orders Abelian topological orders can be classified by a K matrix approach 40 41 42 43 The string net condensation suggests that tensor category such as fusion category or monoidal category is part of the mathematical foundation of topological order in 2 1D The more recent researches suggest that up to invertible topological orders that have no fractionalized excitations 2 1D bosonic topological orders are classified by unitary modular tensor categories 2 1D bosonic topological orders with symmetry G are classified by G crossed tensor categories 2 1D bosonic fermionic topological orders with symmetry G are classified by unitary braided fusion categories over symmetric fusion category that has modular extensions The symmetric fusion category Rep G for bosonic systems and sRep G for fermionic systems Topological order in higher dimensions may be related to n Category theory Quantum operator algebra is a very important mathematical tool in studying topological orders Some also suggest that topological order is mathematically described by extended quantum symmetry 44 Applications editThe materials described by Landau symmetry breaking theory have had a substantial impact on technology For example ferromagnetic materials that break spin rotation symmetry can be used as the media of digital information storage A hard drive made of ferromagnetic materials can store gigabytes of information Liquid crystals that break the rotational symmetry of molecules find wide application in display technology Crystals that break translation symmetry lead to well defined electronic bands which in turn allow us to make semiconducting devices such as transistors Different types of topological orders are even richer than different types of symmetry breaking orders This suggests their potential for exciting novel applications One theorized application would be to use topologically ordered states as media for quantum computing in a technique known as topological quantum computing A topologically ordered state is a state with complicated non local quantum entanglement The non locality means that the quantum entanglement in a topologically ordered state is distributed among many different particles As a result the pattern of quantum entanglements cannot be destroyed by local perturbations This significantly reduces the effect of decoherence This suggests that if we use different quantum entanglements in a topologically ordered state to encode quantum information the information may last much longer 45 The quantum information encoded by the topological quantum entanglements can also be manipulated by dragging the topological defects around each other This process may provide a physical apparatus for performing quantum computations 46 Therefore topologically ordered states may provide natural media for both quantum memory and quantum computation Such realizations of quantum memory and quantum computation may potentially be made fault tolerant 11 Topologically ordered states in general have a special property that they contain non trivial boundary states In many cases those boundary states become perfect conducting channel that can conduct electricity without generating heat 47 This can be another potential application of topological order in electronic devices Similarly to topological order topological insulators 48 49 also have gapless boundary states The boundary states of topological insulators play a key role in the detection and the application of topological insulators This observation naturally leads to a question are topological insulators examples of topologically ordered states In fact topological insulators are different from topologically ordered states defined in this article Topological insulators only have short ranged entanglements and have no topological order while the topological order defined in this article is a pattern of long range entanglement Topological order is robust against any perturbations It has emergent gauge theory emergent fractional charge and fractional statistics In contrast topological insulators are robust only against perturbations that respect time reversal and U 1 symmetries Their quasi particle excitations have no fractional charge and fractional statistics Strictly speaking topological insulator is an example of symmetry protected topological SPT order 50 where the first example of SPT order is the Haldane phase of spin 1 chain 51 52 53 54 But the Haldane phase of spin 2 chain has no SPT order Potential impact editLandau symmetry breaking theory is a cornerstone of condensed matter physics It is used to define the territory of condensed matter research The existence of topological order appears to indicate that nature is much richer than Landau symmetry breaking theory has so far indicated So topological order opens up a new direction in condensed matter physics a new direction of highly entangled quantum matter We realize that quantum phases of matter i e the zero temperature phases of matter can be divided into two classes long range entangled states and short range entangled states 3 Topological order is the notion that describes the long range entangled states topological order pattern of long range entanglements Short range entangled states are trivial in the sense that they all belong to one phase However in the presence of symmetry even short range entangled states are nontrivial and can belong to different phases Those phases are said to contain SPT order 50 SPT order generalizes the notion of topological insulator to interacting systems Some suggest that topological order or more precisely string net condensation in local bosonic spin models have the potential to provide a unified origin for photons electrons and other elementary particles in our universe 4 See also editAKLT model Fractionalization Herbertsmithite Implicate order Quantum topology Spin liquid String net liquid Symmetry protected topological order Topological defect Topological degeneracy Topological entropy in physics Topological quantum field theory Topological quantum number Topological string theoryNotes edit Note that superconductivity can be described by the Ginzburg Landau theory with dynamical U 1 EM gauge field which is a Z2 gauge theory that is an effective theory of Z2 topological order The prediction of the vortex state in superconductors was one of the main successes of Ginzburg Landau theory with dynamical U 1 gauge field The vortex in the gauged Ginzburg Landau theory is nothing but the Z2 flux line in the Z2 gauge theory The Ginzburg Landau theory without the dynamical U 1 gauge field fails to describe the real superconductors with dynamical electromagnetic interaction 8 25 26 27 However in condensed matter physics superconductor usually refers to a state with non dynamical EM gauge field Such a state is a symmetry breaking state with no topological order References edit a b c d Wen 1990 a b Wen amp Niu 1990 a b Chen Xie Gu Zheng Cheng Wen Xiao Gang 2010 Local unitary transformation long range quantum entanglement wave function renormalization and topological order Phys Rev B 82 15 155138 arXiv 1004 3835 Bibcode 2010PhRvB 82o5138C doi 10 1103 physrevb 82 155138 S2CID 14593420 a b Levin amp Wen 2005a See also Levin amp Wen 2006a a b Kalmeyer amp Laughlin 1987 a b Wen Wilczek amp Zee 1989 pp 11413 23 Read N Sachdev Subir 1991 Large N expansion for frustrated quantum antiferromagnets Phys Rev Lett 66 13 1773 6 Bibcode 1991PhRvL 66 1773R doi 10 1103 physrevlett 66 1773 PMID 10043303 a b Wen Xiao Gang 1991 Mean Field Theory of Spin Liquid States with Finite Energy Gap and Topological orders Phys Rev B 44 6 2664 72 Bibcode 1991PhRvB 44 2664W doi 10 1103 physrevb 44 2664 PMID 9999836 S2CID 1675592 a b Tsui Stormer amp Gossard 1982 a b Laughlin 1983 a b Kitaev 2003 Moore Joel E 2010 The birth of topological insulators Nature 464 7286 194 8 Bibcode 2010Natur 464 194M doi 10 1038 nature08916 PMID 20220837 S2CID 1911343 Xiao Gang Wen An Introduction of Topological Orders PDF archived from the original PDF on 29 Aug 2017 Bednorz G Mueller K A 1986 Possible high TC superconductivity in the Ba La Cu O system Z Phys B 64 2 189 193 Bibcode 1986ZPhyB 64 189B doi 10 1007 BF01303701 S2CID 118314311 a b Xiao Gang Wen Phys Rev B 40 7387 1989 Vacuum Degeneracy of Chiral Spin State in Compactified Spaces Atiyah Michael 1988 Topological quantum field theories Publications Mathe matiques de l IHeS 68 175 MR1001453 ISSN 1618 1913 http www numdam org item id PMIHES 1988 68 175 0 Witten Edward 1988 Topological quantum field theory Communications in Mathematical Physics 117 3 353 MR953828 ISSN 0010 3616 http projecteuclid org 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amp Wen 2006 Moroz Sergej Prem Abhinav Gurarie Victor Radzihovsky Leo 2017 Topological order symmetry and Hall response of two dimensional spin singlet superconductors Physical Review B 95 1 014508 arXiv 1606 03462 Bibcode 2017PhRvB 95a4508M doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 95 014508 Hansson T H Oganesyan Vadim Sondhi S L 2004 Superconductors are topologically ordered Annals of Physics 313 2 497 538 arXiv cond mat 0404327 Bibcode 2004AnPhy 313 497H doi 10 1016 j aop 2004 05 006 Xiao Liang Qi Edward Witten Shou Cheng Zhang 2012 Axion topological field theory of topological superconductors Physical Review B 87 13 134519 arXiv 1206 1407 Bibcode 2013PhRvB 87m4519Q doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 87 134519 S2CID 119204930 Juzeliunas Gediminas Ian Spielman 2011 Seeing Topological Order Physics 4 99 99 Bibcode 2011PhyOJ 4 99J doi 10 1103 Physics 4 99 Zhang Y F Li Huichao Sheng L Shen R Xing D Y 2012 Entanglement and Subsystem Particle Numbers in Free Fermion Systems Journal of Physics Condensed Matter 26 10 105502 arXiv 1111 0791 doi 10 1088 0953 8984 26 10 105502 PMID 24553300 S2CID 14947121 Wang Chenjie Levin Michael 22 August 2014 Braiding statistics of loop excitations in three dimensions Physical Review Letters 113 8 080403 arXiv 1403 7437 Bibcode 2014PhRvL 113h0403W doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 113 080403 PMID 25192079 S2CID 23104804 Wang Juven Wen Xiao Gang 15 January 2015 Non Abelian String and Particle Braiding in Topological Order Modular SL 3 Z Representation and 3 1D Twisted Gauge Theory Physical Review B 91 3 035134 arXiv 1404 7854 doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 91 035134 S2CID 13893760 a b Putrov Pavel Wang Juven Yau Shing Tung September 2017 Braiding Statistics and Link Invariants of Bosonic Fermionic Topological Quantum Matter in 2 1 and 3 1 dimensions Annals of Physics 384C 254 287 arXiv 1612 09298 Bibcode 2017AnPhy 384 254P doi 10 1016 j aop 2017 06 019 S2CID 119578849 Levin amp Wen 2005 Levin amp Wen 2003 Hamma Zanardi amp Wen 2005 Bombin amp Martin Delgado 2007 Wen Xiao Gang 1991 Topological Orders and Chern Simons Theory in Strongly Correlated Quantum Liquid Int J Mod Phys B 5 10 1641 Bibcode 1991IJMPB 5 1641W CiteSeerX 10 1 1 676 1963 doi 10 1142 s0217979291001541 Topological Orders and Chern Simons Theory in strongly correlated quantum liquid a review containing comments on topological orders in higher dimensions and or in Higgs phases also introduced a dimension index DI to characterize the robustness of the ground state degeneracy of a topologically ordered state If DI is less or equal to 1 then topological orders cannot exist at finite temperature Prem Abhinav Haah Jeongwan Nandkishore Rahul 2017 Glassy quantum dynamics in translation invariant fracton models Physical Review B 95 15 155133 arXiv 1702 02952 Bibcode 2017PhRvB 95o5133P doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 95 155133 S2CID 118911031 Chamon 2005 Blok B Wen X G 1 October 1990 Effective theories of the fractional quantum Hall effect at generic filling fractions Physical Review B 42 13 8133 44 Bibcode 1990PhRvB 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2002 Freedman et al 2003 Wen 1991a Kane C L Mele E J 23 November 2005 Quantum Spin Hall Effect in Graphene Physical Review Letters 95 22 226801 arXiv cond mat 0411737 Bibcode 2005PhRvL 95v6801K doi 10 1103 physrevlett 95 226801 PMID 16384250 S2CID 6080059 Murakami Shuichi Nagaosa Naoto Zhang Shou Cheng 6 October 2004 Spin Hall Insulator Physical Review Letters 93 15 156804 arXiv cond mat 0406001 Bibcode 2004PhRvL 93o6804M doi 10 1103 physrevlett 93 156804 PMID 15524922 S2CID 13018985 a b Chen Xie Liu Zheng Xin Wen Xiao Gang 2011 2D symmetry protected topological orders and their protected gapless edge excitations Phys Rev B 84 23 235141 arXiv 1106 4752 Bibcode 2011PhRvB 84w5141C doi 10 1103 physrevb 84 235141 S2CID 55330505 Haldane F D M 11 April 1983 Nonlinear Field Theory of Large Spin Heisenberg Antiferromagnets Semiclassically Quantized Solitons of the One Dimensional Easy Axis Neel State Physical Review Letters 50 15 1153 6 Bibcode 1983PhRvL 50 1153H doi 10 1103 physrevlett 50 1153 Haldane F D M 11 November 2004 Berry Curvature on the Fermi Surface Anomalous Hall Effect as a Topological Fermi Liquid Property Physical Review Letters 93 20 206602 arXiv cond mat 0408417 Bibcode 2004PhRvL 93t6602H doi 10 1103 physrevlett 93 206602 PMID 15600949 S2CID 35487502 Affleck Ian Haldane F D M 1 September 1987 Critical theory of quantum spin chains Physical Review B 36 10 5291 5300 Bibcode 1987PhRvB 36 5291A doi 10 1103 physrevb 36 5291 PMID 9942166 Affleck I 15 May 1989 Quantum spin chains and the Haldane gap Journal of Physics Condensed Matter 1 19 IOP Publishing 3047 72 Bibcode 1989JPCM 1 3047A doi 10 1088 0953 8984 1 19 001 S2CID 250850599 References by categories editFractional quantum Hall states edit Tsui D C Stormer H L Gossard A C 1982 Two Dimensional Magnetotransport in the Extreme Quantum Limit Phys Rev Lett 48 22 1559 62 Bibcode 1982PhRvL 48 1559T doi 10 1103 physrevlett 48 1559 Laughlin R B 1983 Anomalous Quantum Hall Effect An Incompressible Quantum Fluid with Fractionally Charged Excitations Phys Rev Lett 50 18 1395 98 Bibcode 1983PhRvL 50 1395L doi 10 1103 physrevlett 50 1395 S2CID 120080343 Chiral spin states edit Kalmeyer V Laughlin R B 2 November 1987 Equivalence of the resonating valence bond and fractional quantum Hall states Physical Review Letters 59 18 2095 8 Bibcode 1987PhRvL 59 2095K doi 10 1103 physrevlett 59 2095 PMID 10035416 Wen X G Wilczek Frank Zee A 1 June 1989 Chiral spin states and superconductivity Physical Review B 39 16 11413 23 Bibcode 1989PhRvB 3911413W doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 39 11413 PMID 9947970 Early characterization of FQH states edit Off diagonal long range order oblique confinement and the fractional quantum Hall effect S M Girvin and A H MacDonald Phys Rev Lett 58 1252 1987 Effective Field Theory Model for the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect S C Zhang and T H Hansson and S Kivelson Phys Rev Lett 62 82 1989 Topological order edit Xiao Gang Wen Phys Rev B 40 7387 1989 Vacuum Degeneracy of Chiral Spin State in Compactified Spaces Wen Xiao Gang 1990 Topological Orders in Rigid States PDF Int J Mod Phys B 4 2 239 Bibcode 1990IJMPB 4 239W CiteSeerX 10 1 1 676 4078 doi 10 1142 S0217979290000139 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2009 04 09 Xiao Gang Wen Quantum Field Theory of Many Body Systems From the Origin of Sound to an Origin of Light and Electrons Oxford Univ Press Oxford 2004 Characterization of topological order edit D Arovas and J R Schrieffer and F Wilczek Phys Rev Lett 53 722 1984 Fractional Statistics and the Quantum Hall Effect Wen Xiao Gang Niu Qian 1990 Ground state degeneracy of the FQH states in presence of random potential and on high genus Riemann surfaces PDF Phys Rev B 41 13 9377 96 Bibcode 1990PhRvB 41 9377W doi 10 1103 physrevb 41 9377 PMID 9993283 Wen Xiao Gang 1991a Gapless Boundary Excitations in the FQH States and in the Chiral Spin States PDF Phys Rev B 43 13 11025 36 Bibcode 1991PhRvB 4311025W doi 10 1103 physrevb 43 11025 PMID 9996836 Kitaev Alexei Preskill John 24 March 2006 Topological Entanglement Entropy Physical Review Letters 96 11 110404 arXiv hep th 0510092 Bibcode 2006PhRvL 96k0404K doi 10 1103 physrevlett 96 110404 PMID 16605802 S2CID 18480266 Levin Michael Wen Xiao Gang 24 March 2006 Detecting Topological Order in a Ground State Wave Function Physical Review Letters 96 11 110405 arXiv cond mat 0510613 Bibcode 2006PhRvL 96k0405L doi 10 1103 physrevlett 96 110405 PMID 16605803 S2CID 206329868 Effective theory of topological order edit Witten E 1989 Quantum field theory and the Jones polynomial Comm Math Phys 121 3 351 399 Bibcode 1989CMaPh 121 351W doi 10 1007 bf01217730 MR 0990772 S2CID 14951363 Zbl 0667 57005 Mechanism of topological order edit Levin Michael A Wen Xiao Gang 12 January 2005 String net condensation A physical mechanism for topological phases Physical Review B 71 4 045110 arXiv cond mat 0404617 Bibcode 2005PhRvB 71d5110L doi 10 1103 physrevb 71 045110 S2CID 51962817 Chamon C 2005 Quantum Glassiness in Strongly Correlated Clean Systems An Example of Topological Overprotection Phys Rev Lett 94 4 040402 arXiv cond mat 0404182 Bibcode 2005PhRvL 94d0402C doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 94 040402 PMID 15783534 S2CID 25731669 Hamma Alioscia Zanardi Paolo Wen Xiao Gang 2005 String and Membrane condensation on 3D lattices Phys Rev B 72 3 035307 arXiv cond mat 0411752 Bibcode 2005PhRvB 72c5307H doi 10 1103 physrevb 72 035307 S2CID 118956379 Bombin H Martin Delgado M A 7 February 2007 Exact topological quantum order inD 3and beyond Branyons and brane net condensates Physical Review B 75 7 075103 arXiv cond mat 0607736 Bibcode 2007PhRvB 75g5103B doi 10 1103 physrevb 75 075103 S2CID 119460756 Quantum computing edit Nayak Chetan Simon Steven H Stern Ady Freedman Michael Das Sarma Sankar 2008 Non Abelian anyons and topological quantum computation Reviews of Modern Physics 80 3 1083 1159 arXiv 0707 1889 Bibcode 2008RvMP 80 1083N doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 80 1083 Kitaev Alexei Yu 2003 Fault tolerant quantum computation by anyons Annals of Physics 303 1 2 30 arXiv quant ph 9707021 Bibcode 2003AnPhy 303 2K doi 10 1016 S0003 4916 02 00018 0 S2CID 119087885 Freedman Michael H Kitaev Alexei Larsen Michael J Wang Zhenghan 2003 Topological quantum computation Bull Amer Math Soc 40 31 arXiv quant ph 0101025 doi 10 1090 s0273 0979 02 00964 3 Dennis Eric Kitaev Alexei Landahl Andrew Preskill John 2002 Topological quantum memory J Math Phys 43 9 4452 4505 arXiv quant ph 0110143 Bibcode 2002JMP 43 4452D doi 10 1063 1 1499754 S2CID 36673677 Ady Stern and Bertrand I Halperin Phys Rev Lett 96 016802 2006 Proposed Experiments to probe the Non Abelian nu 5 2 Quantum Hall StateEmergence of elementary particles edit Xiao Gang Wen Phys Rev D68 024501 2003 Quantum order from string net condensations and origin of light and massless fermions Levin Michael Wen Xiao Gang 20 June 2003 Fermions strings and gauge fields in lattice spin models Physical Review B 67 24 245316 arXiv cond mat 0302460 Bibcode 2003PhRvB 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Providence RI 2001 also math ph 001005 Non Abelian Quantum Algebraic Topology NAQAT 20 Nov 2008 87 pages Baianu I C Levin A and Olshanetsky M Hamiltonian Algebroids and deformations of complex structures on Riemann curves hep th 0301078v1 Xiao Gang Wen Yong Shi Wu and Y Hatsugai Chiral operator product algebra and edge excitations of a FQH droplet pdf Nucl Phys B422 476 1994 Used chiral operator product algebra to construct the bulk wave function characterize the topological orders and calculate the edge states for some non Abelian FQH states Xiao Gang Wen and Yong Shi Wu Chiral operator product algebra hidden in certain FQH states pdf Nucl Phys B419 455 1994 Demonstrated that non Abelian topological orders are closely related to chiral operator product algebra instead of conformal field theory Non Abelian theory Baianu I C 2007 A Non Abelian Categorical Ontology of Spacetimes and Quantum Gravity Axiomathes 17 3 4 353 408 doi 10 1007 s10516 007 9012 1 S2CID 3909409 R Brown P J Higgins P J and R Sivera Nonabelian Algebraic Topology filtered spaces crossed complexes cubical homotopy groupoids EMS Tracts in Mathematics Vol 15 2011 A Bibliography for Categories and Algebraic Topology Applications in Theoretical Physics Quantum Algebraic Topology QAT permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Topological order amp oldid 1195149674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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