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Questions tagged [solitons]

Solitons are self-stabilizing solitary wave packets maintaining their shape propagating at a constant velocity. They are caused by a balance of nonlinear and dispersive (where the speed of the waves varies with frequency) effects in the medium.

4 votes
1 answer
288 views

Energy of moving Sine-Gordon breather

A few days ago I stumbled across the formula for the energy of a moving breather for the sine-Gordon equation $$ \Box^2 \phi = -\sin\phi.$$ The energy in general is given by ($c=1$) $$ E = \int_{-\...
Ash's user avatar
  • 41
2 votes
0 answers
86 views

Soliton and Goldstone boson

I'm learning Gross-Pitaevskii model. By spontaneous symmetry breaking one obtains Bogoljubov modes, which ensures Landau criterion. So those modes have two features, for one they are Goldstone bosons ...
JinH's user avatar
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0 answers
35 views

How to derive the ODE from the EOM of vortex?

In the Lagrangian mode we have the equation of motion \begin{align} \partial_\mu F^{\mu\nu}&=j^\nu. \\ D_{\mu }D^{\mu}\phi +\mu^{2}\phi-\lambda(\phi^{*}\phi)\phi &=0. \end{align} Since we ...
Qian-Sheng's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
57 views

Obtaining the topological charge

I want to obtain the topological charge or winding number of the map $$ f_n(\mathbf{r})=(\sin \theta \cos (n \varphi), \sin \theta \sin (n \varphi), \cos \theta) $$ and my lecture notes say that it is ...
Gorga's user avatar
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0 votes
0 answers
21 views

Soliton in non-degenerate polymer

I just started reading about the conduction mechanism in polymer. From what i read, polarons are used as method of charge transportation in non-degenerate polymer. While for degenerate polymer, both ...
taqiuddin yusri's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
40 views

Why do soliton modes in polyacetylene have to appear at the edges of an open boundary chain?

When calculating the presence of soliton or anti-soliton in the extreme dimerization polyacetylene SSH model, we say that in the case of open-boundary condition and odd number of atoms, we must have ...
Pedro De Oliveira's user avatar
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0 answers
99 views

What is the topology of sine-Gordon equation?

In one pdf on solitons, I am finding the following written For the sine-Gordon theory, it is much better to think of $\phi$ as a field modulo $2\pi$, i.e. as a function $\phi: R \rightarrow S_{1}$. ...
Arkaprava Sil's user avatar
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0 answers
30 views

Do topological solitons allow modeling non-degenerate multiple vacua?

I am not well-versed in the research on topological solitons but am interested to make a good sense of its implication. The highly interesting point in this new talk by Nick Manton was where he is ...
VVM's user avatar
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0 votes
0 answers
29 views

Overview work on radio solitons?

I've heard about solitons in dense mediums (water), sparse mediums (acoustic) and optical fiber. But I can't find a good overview work on solitons in radio spectrum. Something like generating EM ...
monday's user avatar
  • 111
1 vote
1 answer
71 views

Why only $\phi=\pm1$ are considered "vacuum states" in the Klein-Gordon model with $\phi^4$ potential, and not $\phi=0$?

I am reading "Kink Moduli Spaces — Collective Coordinates Reconsidered," by Manton, Oleś, Romańczukiewicz, and Wereszczyński (arXiv version), where they consider the Klein-Gordon equation, $$...
Michael Nestor's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
129 views

Scale transformation of the scalar field and gauge field

I am reading this paper: "Magnetic monopoles in gauge field theories", by Goddard and Olive. I don't understand some scale transformations that appear in Page 1427. Start from the energy ...
Daren's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
108 views

Can a "depressive soliton" wave exist? That is, can we have a trough without any crest? Why or why not?

I know that "soliton" waves can consist of a crest without a trough. One would expect the reverse to be true as well. However, this Wikipedia excerpt says, So for this nonlinear gravity ...
Abdullah is not an Amalekite's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
39 views

Formation of optical solitons in microresonators

Optical soliton formation in laser systems with devices that facilitate mode-locking such as a saturable absorber help me understand why solitons form in the first place. However, when one considers a ...
Paddy's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
67 views

Arbitrary heat kernel coefficients of covariant Laplacian with instanton

The heat kernel coefficients $b_{2k}(x,y)$ of the covariant Laplacian in an $SU(2)$ instanton background (for simplicity let's say $q=1$ topological charge, so the 't Hooft solution) on $R^4$ is ...
Fetchinson0234's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
62 views

Sine-gordon mass term

Simple question: are there some notes or explicit calculations of the mass term from the paper of Zamolodchikov - Mass scale in the sine-gordon model and its reduction (1994)? I need to justify this ...
LorP's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
46 views

Wave propagation speed in non-linear differential equations

Could it happen than a solitary travelling wave (soliton) had a different propagation speed when seen from the usual wave equations from that in a non-linear equation. I mean, suppose a solution $F=f(...
riemannium's user avatar
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0 votes
2 answers
52 views

Does a general soliton solution satisfy ALSO the normal wave equation?

I checked that the usual wave funtions of a gaussian pulse, a $\text{sech}(x-vt)$ and $\text{sech}^2(x-vt)$ solitons (the two latter from KdV equations) satisfy the wave equation. Is this general? I ...
riemannium's user avatar
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1 vote
1 answer
109 views

Resources for Gravitational Soliton (specially on the Belinski–Zakharov transform)

Can someone provide some resources (books, notes, articles etc.) on Gravitational Soliton (specially on the Belinski–Zakharov transform)? I've found only the following two reference from the Wikipedia ...
1 vote
0 answers
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Solitons and traveling waves for a Schrödinger type equation

I am a mathematician and not a physicist. I came across a non--linear PDE whose linear part is a Schrödinger equation (i.e. a dispersive equation) and we know that this equation has a solution for $x\...
Niser's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
61 views

If principle $SU(N)$ bundles on 3-manifolds are trivial, how can there be magnetic monopoles?

Magnetic monopoles are solitons, i.e. field configurations on space (which is 3 dimensional). In pure $SU(N)$ gauge theory, magnetic monopoles can be constructed via 't Hooft's abelian projection (...
dennis's user avatar
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1 vote
1 answer
162 views

It is said that the dual Meissner effect can explain confinement, but where is the Higgs?

It is said that the dual Misner effect can explain confinement. This refers to when the monopole field acquires a v.e.v.. The t'Hooft-Polyakov monopole arises in a theory with a Higgs. So how does the ...
dennis's user avatar
  • 742
2 votes
1 answer
103 views

What do monopoles have to do with strong coupling?

My understanding is that strong coupling effects arise from instantons in the path integral. But I sometimes read that monopoles (see the electric-magnetic duality) can allow one to calculate strong ...
dennis's user avatar
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2 votes
0 answers
34 views

Hopfion with only in-plane vortex rather than skyrmion along the torus?

A simple torus-like hopfion with hopf charge $Q_H=1$ will typically exhibit a skyrmion at each slice cutting the toroidal circle. What if the skyrmion is replaced by an in-plane 2D vortex, i.e., we ...
xiaohuamao's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
140 views

Topological charge change in QFT

Is it possible for the topological charge to change in quantum field theory? The proofs in the following paper: Quantum soliton operators for vortices and superselection rules are all based on the ...
Bastam Tajik's user avatar
  • 1,212
1 vote
0 answers
61 views

What is a difference between solitons and anyons?

In the article Creation and annihilation of mobile fractional solitons in atomic chains the authors claim that they prepared 1D solitons which can be used in topological quantum computing. Based on ...
Martin Vesely's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
107 views

Why are non-perturbative solutions important and how to take them into account?

I am guilty of studying physics with an almost complete focus on the mathematical constructions (together with the motivating physical premisses) and ignoring the semantic physical intuition, which I'...
GaloisFan's user avatar
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2 votes
2 answers
143 views

Wave without trough?

Why does this video appear to show a wave with no trough? Do such waves exist?
Abdullah is not an Amalekite's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
27 views

Questions on the Zakharov-Shabat inverse scattering paper

I am trying to work through the Zakharov and Shabat paper on inverse scattering for the nonlinear Schrodinger equation (PDF). I am stuck on section 2. Problem 1. I need to know how to reconstruct $\...
bradas128's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
55 views

Can wrapped D-branes change the cycle they wrap, by quantum effects?

Suppose the internal manifold in a string compactification of type II, say, contains a D-brane wrapped around a given cycle. Is there an obstruction to the brane changing its wrapping cycle via a sort ...
Andrei's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
74 views

Can a kink in a finite one dimensional box tunnel into a trivial solution?

Given a simple kink solution of the Sine Gordon equation, is it possible for such a solution in a finite volume to tunnel into a trivial vacuum solution, given that such tunneling demands a finite ...
Bastam Tajik's user avatar
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