't Hooft-Polyakov monopole
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In theoretical physics, the 't Hooft-Polyakov monopole is a topological soliton similar to the Dirac monopole but without any singularities. It arises in the case of a Yang-Mills theory with a gauge group G, coupled to a Higgs field which spontaneously breaks it down to a smaller group H via the Higgs mechanism.
Unlike the Dirac monopole, the Gerard 't Hooft-Polyakov monopole is a smooth solution with a finite total energy. The solution is localized around [r=0]. Very far from the origin, the gauge group G is broken to H, and the 't Hooft-Polyakov monopole reduces to the Dirac monopole.
However, at the origin itself, the G gauge symmetry is unbroken and the solution is non-singular also near the origin. The Higgs field
- [H_i (i=1,2,3) \,]
- [x_i f(|x|) \,]
Mathematical details
Suppose the vacuum is the vacuum manifold Σ. Then, for finite energies, as we move along each direction towards spatial infinity, the state along the path approaches a point on the vacuum manifold Σ. Otherwise, we would not have a finite energy. In topologically trival 3 + 1 dimensions, this means spatial infinity is homotopically equivalent to the topological sphere S2. So, the superselection sectors are classified by the second homotopy group of Σ, π2(Σ).In the special case of a Yang-Mills-Higgs theory, the vacuum manifold is isomorphic to the quotient space G/H and the relevant homotopy group is π2(G/H). Note that this doesn't actually require the existence of a scalar Higgs field. Most symmetry breaking mechanisms (e.g. technicolor) would also give rise to a 't Hooft-Polyakov monopole.
It's easy to generalize to the case of d + 1 dimensions. We have πd−1(Σ).
Monopole problem
The fact that we haven't detected any monopoles yet is called the monopole problem.
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