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Topological quantum field theory

Topological quantum field theory (TQFT) is a mathematical and physical framework that associates finite-dimensional spaces and linear maps to manifolds and cobordisms in a functorial manner, ensuring that the assignments are invariant under diffeomorphisms and depend only on the of the spaces involved. Formally, an n-dimensional TQFT over a or is a symmetric monoidal from the category of n-dimensional bordisms (oriented manifolds with corners representing evolution) to the category of spaces and linear maps, satisfying axioms of multiplicativity, orientation reversal duality, and gluing along boundaries. The concept originated in the late 1980s from efforts in to understand supersymmetric gauge theories whose observables are topological, notably through Edward Witten's formulation of a twisted N=2 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory in four dimensions, which generates Donaldson invariants for four-manifolds via path integrals over instanton moduli spaces. This physical motivation was soon axiomatized mathematically by , who proposed a precise categorical definition emphasizing functoriality with respect to diffeomorphisms, multiplicativity over disjoint unions, and compatibility with gluing along common boundaries, thereby bridging with . Graeme Segal further refined the axiomatic approach by emphasizing the role of techniques in two dimensions, though the core ideas apply across dimensions. Prominent examples include the Chern-Simons TQFT in three dimensions, which underlies the Jones polynomial and more general Reshetikhin-Turaev invariants for knots and links, providing computable topological invariants via representations of quantum groups. In two dimensions, TQFTs correspond to Frobenius algebras, yielding invariants like the Verlinde formula for modular tensor categories used in . Higher-dimensional extensions, such as those related to Donaldson-Floer homology, connect TQFTs to infinite-dimensional moduli spaces and equivariant cohomology, influencing research in and . Beyond pure mathematics, TQFTs have applications in , where anyons in fractional quantum Hall systems or Kitaev's model realize braiding statistics captured by modular functor data from TQFTs, enabling fault-tolerant processing. Recent developments extend TQFTs to extended topological theories incorporating , such as n-fold Segal categories, to handle bordisms with tangential structures like or orientation, enhancing their role in and .

Introduction

Definition and Motivations

A topological quantum field theory (TQFT) is a symmetric monoidal functor from the cobordism category of oriented manifolds to the category of vector spaces and linear maps, where closed n-dimensional manifolds are assigned finite-dimensional vector spaces and (n+1)-dimensional cobordisms between them are assigned linear maps between those spaces. This assignment yields topological invariants that depend only on the diffeomorphism class of the manifolds, independent of any metric or smooth structure. The motivations for TQFTs stem from efforts to axiomatize quantum field theories in which observables are invariant under diffeomorphisms, capturing global, topological features rather than local metric-dependent ones. In physics, they arise as twisted versions of supersymmetric theories, such as those explored by , where the localizes to fixed points of the BRST operator, producing diffeomorphism-invariant correlation functions that compute topological invariants like Donaldson polynomials. Mathematically, TQFTs bridge and by providing a framework to derive new invariants for low-dimensional manifolds from quantum field theoretic constructions, emphasizing discrete phenomena emerging from continuous backgrounds. In the two-dimensional case, a TQFT yields a modular functor, which assigns vector spaces to marked surfaces and provides a projective representation of the modular group \mathrm{SL}(2, \mathbb{Z}) via the mapping class group action on the torus. TQFTs exemplify extended field theories, which incorporate higher-dimensional bordisms by assigning objects not just to closed manifolds but to manifolds with corners of all dimensions, enabling a fully local description of the theory.

Historical Origins

The concept of topological quantum field theory (TQFT) emerged in 1988, primarily through the work of , who was inspired by Edward Witten's insights into and gauge theories, particularly their topological aspects. Atiyah proposed a framework for TQFTs as functors from cobordisms to vector spaces, aiming to unify physical theories with topological invariants. This development was motivated by Witten's explorations of supersymmetric models that yielded metric-independent observables, bridging with . Concurrently, Witten published a foundational paper on TQFT, formulating a twisted supersymmetric in four dimensions that refined earlier non-relativistic approaches and connected to Donaldson polynomials. 's separate 1988 work on (2+1)-dimensional gravity further linked TQFT ideas to knot invariants, including the Jones polynomial, via exactly solvable models. These contributions highlighted TQFT's roots in physical origins such as Chern-Simons theory. In 1989, Albert Schwarz independently formulated a cohomological approach to TQFT, emphasizing metric-independent actions and partition functions as topological invariants, which complemented the earlier axiomatic efforts. Graeme Segal played a key role in the axiomatization, drawing from his prior work on conformal field theories to provide a rigorous functorial perspective that influenced Atiyah's framework. By 1990, Nikolai Reshetikhin and Vladimir Turaev constructed a 3D TQFT using quantum groups, yielding rigorous and 3-manifold invariants that realized Witten's physical predictions mathematically. In 1993, Louis Crane and David Yetter introduced a categorical model for 4D TQFT, extending the framework to higher dimensions via state-sum constructions on triangulations.

Axiomatic Foundations

Atiyah-Segal Axioms

The Atiyah-Segal axioms provide the foundational mathematical framework for an n-dimensional topological quantum field theory (TQFT), defining it as a symmetric monoidal Z from the category n-Cob to the Vect of finite-dimensional complex vector spaces. The n-Cob has objects given by closed oriented (n-1)-dimensional manifolds (up to ), with morphisms consisting of oriented n-dimensional between them (also up to ), where arises from gluing along common boundaries and the monoidal structure is induced by . This functorial approach ensures that topological structures are mapped to algebraic ones in a way that respects the geometric operations of cobordisms. Under this functor, Z assigns to each closed oriented (n-1)-manifold M a finite-dimensional complex vector space H(M), often called the or state space associated to M. For an n-dimensional W: M \to N (with incoming boundary M and outgoing boundary N), Z assigns a Z(W): H(M) \to H(N). The functoriality of Z implies that orientation-preserving diffeomorphisms induce isomorphisms between the corresponding spaces or maps. The axioms are encapsulated in the following six postulates, which ensure the theory is well-behaved under geometric manipulations:
  1. Assignment of state spaces: To every closed oriented (n-1)-manifold M, associate a finite-dimensional H(M).
  2. Cobordism maps: To every oriented n-dimensional W: M \to N, associate a Z(W): H(M) \to H(N), compatible with the functorial structure.
  3. Duality axiom: For a closed oriented (n-1)-manifold M with reversed M^*, H(M^*) is the H(M)^*.
  4. Gluing axiom: If two s W_1: M \to P and W_2: P \to N are glued along the common boundary P to form a new W: M \to N, then Z(W) = Z(W_2) \circ Z(W_1).
  5. Disjoint union axiom: For disjoint unions of manifolds M \sqcup M' and cobordisms, H(M \sqcup M') = H(M) \otimes H(M'), and similarly for the maps, establishing the symmetric monoidal structure.
  6. Dimension axiom: The state space for the empty (n-1)-manifold is the complex numbers, H(\emptyset) = \mathbb{C}, ensuring a normalized for closed n-manifolds.
Michael Atiyah's original 1988 formulation emphasized motivations from but presented the axioms in a somewhat informal manner over general rings; full mathematical rigor, particularly the categorical perspective, was achieved through refinements inspired by Graeme Segal's 1988 axiomatization of two-dimensional conformal field theories. This framework physically corresponds to a where state spaces evolve via cobordisms, though the axioms themselves are purely topological.

Cobordism and Functorial Approach

The category provides a rigorous categorical framework for formulating topological quantum field theories (TQFTs). In this setup, the n-dimensional category, denoted n-Cob or Bord_n, has objects consisting of closed oriented (n-1)-manifolds considered up to . Morphisms between objects M and N are oriented n-dimensional cobordisms from M to N, which are compact n-manifolds with boundary diffeomorphic to the of M and N (with orientations reversed on the outgoing boundary), also taken up to . The is equipped with a symmetric monoidal structure given by , making it suitable for modeling processes in TQFT. A TQFT is then realized as a symmetric monoidal functor Z: n-Cob → (Vect, ⊗), where Vect denotes the category of finite-dimensional vector spaces over a field (typically ℂ), and ⊗ is the tensor product. This functor assigns to each object (n-1)-manifold M a vector space Z(M), interpreted as the Hilbert space of states on M, and to each morphism (cobordism) W: M → N a linear map Z(W): Z(M) → Z(N), representing the time evolution or process mediated by W. The functor preserves the monoidal structure, mapping disjoint unions to tensor products, with the unit object (the empty manifold) sent to the base field and the empty cobordism acting as identities. Crucially, Z respects composition of morphisms: for cobordisms W₁: M → N and W₂: N → P, the gluing W₂ ∘ W₁ yields Z(W₂ ∘ W₁) = Z(W₂) ∘ Z(W₁), ensuring multiplicativity under spacetime gluing. This functorial property generalizes the original Atiyah-Segal axioms by embedding TQFTs in higher category theory. Lurie's 2009 work provided a complete proof of the cobordism hypothesis, classifying fully extended framed TQFTs via fully dualizable objects in symmetric monoidal ∞-categories. For framed TQFTs, which incorporate framings (trivializations of the stabilized ) to handle orientation and tangential structures, the category Bord_fr_n is used, which is O(n)-equivariant. established that such framed n-dimensional TQFTs correspond bijectively to E_n-algebras in a symmetric , where E_n-algebras encode n-fold loop space structures compatible with the hypothesis. This classification shows that framed TQFTs are fully determined by their value on a single framed point, up to equivalence, via fully dualizable objects. Extensions to infinite-dimensional settings arise in gauge-theoretic TQFTs, where moduli spaces of connections are infinite-dimensional. Bauer and Furuta developed stable cohomotopy invariants refining Seiberg-Witten invariants using the monopole map in equivariant stable cohomotopy groups.

Physical and Mathematical Connections

Topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) emerge physically as the low-energy effective descriptions of certain gauge theories, particularly those exhibiting topological order where the dynamics become independent of the spacetime metric, focusing instead on global topological features of the underlying manifold. In these theories, the observables are constructed to be diffeomorphism-invariant, capturing properties like knot and link invariants or manifold characteristics that remain unchanged under continuous deformations of the geometry. This metric independence arises because the action is purely topological, lacking dependence on local metrics or distances, which confines the theory's degrees of freedom to topological sectors. The quantization of such theories is typically formulated via the approach, where the partition function for a manifold M is given by Z(M) = \int \mathcal{D}A \, \exp\left(i S[A]\right), with the integral over all gauge connections A and S[A] a topological action invariant under diffeomorphisms. A prototypical example is the Chern-Simons theory in three dimensions, whose action takes the form S[A] = \frac{k}{4\pi} \int_M \operatorname{Tr}\left(A \wedge dA + \frac{2}{3} A \wedge A \wedge A\right), where k is an integer level parameter ensuring quantization consistency, and the trace is over the of a like SU(2). Observables in this framework include Wilson loops, which are path-ordered exponentials of the gauge field along curves in M, providing measurable quantities that probe the topology. A seminal insight connecting TQFTs to knot theory came from Edward Witten in 1989, who demonstrated that the expectation values of Wilson loops in SU(2)_k Chern-Simons theory on three-manifolds yield the Jones polynomial as a knot invariant, thereby linking quantum field theoretic computations to classical topological invariants. BF theories, which generalize this structure to higher dimensions with actions bilinear in gauge fields and their curvatures, serve as another class of examples where similar path integral quantizations produce topological invariants. These formulations highlight how TQFTs bridge gauge theory dynamics with purely topological data, independent of metric details.

Topological Invariants from Physics

In topological quantum field theories (TQFTs), physical observables such as vacuum expectation values \langle O \rangle of local operators yield computable invariants that depend solely on the of the underlying manifold, in stark contrast to ordinary quantum field theories (QFTs) where results typically rely on the structure of . These invariants arise because TQFTs are designed to be independent of the choice of , ensuring that functions remain unchanged under continuous deformations of the . For instance, in gauge-theoretic formulations, Wilson loops—path-ordered exponentials of the gauge field along closed curves—compute linking numbers between curves, which are purely topological measures under diffeomorphisms. This metric independence is enforced through symmetries such as , where the BRST operator generates transformations that render the action and observables equivariant under , effectively quotienting out metric-dependent degrees of freedom. In the BRST formalism, the physical is the of the BRST operator, and observables are BRST-closed, guaranteeing their topological nature without reference to a specific metric. Equivariance under the full group further ensures that these quantities classify topological features, such as the framing or of submanifolds, providing robust invariants for manifolds and embeddings. In three dimensions, TQFTs give rise to representations of mapping class groups of surfaces, capturing how Dehn twists and other generators act on the Hilbert spaces associated to boundaries, thereby classifying projective representations up to unitary equivalence. This connection was developed in the 1990s through the work of Vladimir Turaev, who formalized quantum invariants derived from modular tensor categories, linking physical TQFT constructions to algebraic topology. A canonical example is the Reshetikhin-Turaev invariant \tau(M) for a closed oriented 3-manifold M, defined as the trace in the TQFT Hilbert space of the linear map assigned to M: \tau(M) = \operatorname{Tr}_{\mathcal{H}(\emptyset)} \left( Z(M) \right), where Z(M) : \mathcal{H}(\emptyset) \to \mathcal{H}(\emptyset) is the linear map assigned by the TQFT to the closed manifold M, and \mathcal{H}(\emptyset) is the vector space assigned to the empty boundary, computed via surgery on links colored by representations of a quantum group. This invariant, originating from Witten's physical insights into Chern-Simons theory, provides a diffeomorphism-invariant label for 3-manifolds.

Low-Dimensional Examples

Zero- and One-Dimensional Cases

In zero-dimensional topological quantum field theory, the assignment to the empty manifold is the ground field \mathbb{C}, serving as the monoidal , while a single point is assigned the complex line \mathbb{C} itself, with multiple points receiving the \mathbb{C}^{\otimes n} \cong \mathbb{C}. This trivial structure corresponds to the on \mathbb{C} with standard multiplication \mu: \mathbb{C} \otimes \mathbb{C} \to \mathbb{C} given by (z_1 \otimes z_2) \mapsto z_1 z_2 and \eta: \mathbb{C} \to \mathbb{C} the , alongside the counit () \varepsilon: \mathbb{C} \to \mathbb{C} also the map. The interval , connecting the empty manifold to itself, is represented by the map \mathrm{id}: \mathbb{C} \to \mathbb{C}. In one dimension, a topological quantum field theory assigns to each 0-manifold consisting of n points a finite-dimensional V^{\otimes n}, where V = Z(\bullet) is the associated to a single point. The cobordisms are linear maps compatible with this assignment: a pair of pants (merging two incoming points into one outgoing point) corresponds to the multiplication \mu: V \otimes V \to V, while a (annihilating one incoming point into the empty outgoing manifold) is the counit \varepsilon: V \to \mathbb{C}. These operations, together with their duals ( and comultiplication), equip V with a structure, ensuring the functoriality and multiplicativity axioms hold, including the gluing axiom for composing s. The interval cobordism from a single point to itself is the identity map \mathrm{id}_V: V \to V, and the (closed 1-manifold from empty to empty) yields the trace operation \mathrm{tr}: V \to \mathbb{C}, defined via the Frobenius form as \mathrm{tr}(v) = \varepsilon(v), with the value on the being \mathrm{tr}(\mathrm{id}_V) = \dim V. Such 1D TQFTs are equivalent to finite-dimensional vector spaces equipped with a nondegenerate arising from the duality in the . Specific constructions arise from finite-dimensional representations of s, where the group algebra \mathbb{C}[G](/page/G) over a finite group G provides the vector space V = \mathbb{C}G with a Frobenius structure via the , multiplication from the group operation, and trace given by the augmentation map summing coefficients. In Atiyah's seminal axiomatization, an example uses \mathbb{Z}/2-graded vector spaces in the context of , where the grading distinguishes even and odd degrees, assigning graded spaces to points and mod-2 graded chain complexes to cobordisms like intervals.

Two-Dimensional Models

Two-dimensional topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) assign finite-dimensional vector spaces to oriented circles, interpreted as state spaces, and linear maps to cobordisms between them, such as pairs of pants or tori, constructed via sewing operations that glue boundaries while preserving topological invariance. These state spaces can be viewed as representations of underlying , where the encodes the fusion rules and braiding of anyons or primary fields. A foundational result establishes that every 2D TQFT is equivalent to a commutative over a , with the algebra's and corresponding to the TQFT's of incoming and outgoing boundaries on a pair-of-pants , and the providing the for closed surfaces. This equivalence categorifies the TQFT as a monoidal from the of 2D to the of spaces, enabling explicit computations of for surfaces of arbitrary . Rational conformal field theories (RCFTs) provide concrete realizations of TQFTs in the topological limit where the central charge c = 0, decoupling the stress-energy tensor and yielding modular functors that assign Hilbert spaces to punctured surfaces based on primary field representations. In this setting, the axioms for modular functors, formulated by and Seiberg in , ensure consistency under modular transformations, including sewing constraints and duality for multi-punctured spheres and higher-genus surfaces. The dimension of the state space H_g on a genus-g surface is given by the Verlinde formula: \dim H_g = \sum_i (S_{0i})^{2-2g}, where S is the modular S-matrix encoding the theory's fusion coefficients and braiding phases, with the sum over primary fields i and S_{0i} the entry coupling the vacuum to field i. This formula arises from modular invariance and computes the number of conformal blocks, reducing to a topological invariant when c=0. Dijkgraaf-Witten models in two dimensions arise from finite-group gauge theories with group G, where the state space on a circle is the space of class functions on G, and cobordisms are evaluated using integrals over flat connections weighted by group cohomology classes. These models yield Frobenius algebras from the \mathbb{C}[G], classifying extended framed 2D TQFTs up to , with the partition function on a closed surface equaling the number of conjugacy classes in G.

Higher-Dimensional Models

Three-Dimensional Chern-Simons Theory

Three-dimensional Chern-Simons theory provides the canonical example of a topological quantum field theory in three dimensions, constructed from the quantization of a specific invariant under diffeomorphisms. The theory is defined for a compact G and an integer level k > 0, with the classical given by S[A] = \frac{k}{4\pi} \int_M \operatorname{Tr} \left( A \wedge dA + \frac{2}{3} A \wedge A \wedge A \right), where A is a connection on a principal G-bundle over the three-manifold M, and \operatorname{Tr} denotes the trace in the fundamental representation of the Lie algebra \mathfrak{g}. This is topological, depending only on the manifold's topology rather than its metric, and leads to a quantum theory whose observables are invariants of links and three-manifolds embedded in M. The partition function of the theory on a closed manifold computes topological invariants, while Wilson lines along links serve as observables that yield link polynomials. Quantization of Chern-Simons theory proceeds via the over connections, with the level k quantized to ensure invariance under large transformations, requiring k to be an . On spatial slices that are surfaces, the of states acquires a natural interpretation: for a T^2, it is isomorphic to the of integrable highest-weight representations of the affine Kac-Moody \hat{\mathfrak{g}}_k at level k. These representations are finite-dimensional, labeled by weights satisfying the level-k integrability condition, and the inner product on this space is determined by the modular S-matrix from the theory's conformal boundary data. The full TQFT structure emerges from gluing these along cobordisms, yielding a from the of two-manifolds and three-cobordisms to spaces and linear maps. This quantization reveals deep connections to two-dimensional on the boundaries, where the chiral sectors correspond to Wess-Zumino-Witten models at level k. A key application arises from observables: inserting Wilson lines along a framed link L in the three-manifold modifies the path integral to produce a link invariant V_L(q), where q = \exp\left(2\pi i / (k + h^\vee)\right) and h^\vee is the dual Coxeter number of \mathfrak{g}. For G = SU(2), this recovers the Jones polynomial at q = \exp(2\pi i / (k + 2)), providing a quantum mechanical derivation of knot and link invariants from the expectation value of loops. In the abelian limit where G = U(1) and the non-abelian terms vanish, the theory reduces to BF theory, yielding simpler invariants like the . Edward first derived these results in 1989 using methods in . A rigorous mathematical construction followed in 1991 by Nikolai Reshetikhin and Vladimir Turaev, who framed the invariants using representations of quantum groups (ribbon Hopf algebras) and modular tensor categories, ensuring combinatorial computability without reference to field theory.

BF Theories and Generalizations

BF theories constitute a fundamental class of topological gauge theories within topological quantum field theory, generalizable to arbitrary dimensions but particularly studied in three and four dimensions. The Lagrangian is formulated as S = \int_M \Tr \left( B \wedge F(A) \right), where A is a connection on a principal G-bundle over the manifold M, F(A) = dA + A \wedge A denotes its curvature two-form, B is an adjoint-valued (d-2)-form serving as a Lagrange multiplier enforcing flatness, and \Tr is the Killing form trace on the Lie algebra of the compact gauge group G. The equations of motion F(A) = 0 and d_A B = 0 ensure metric independence, rendering all correlation functions topological invariants. This formulation, establishing BF theories as a new class of TQFTs, was introduced by Blau and Thompson in 1989 and further developed in their 1990 work on geometry and quantization. In three dimensions, abelian BF theory is equivalent to a doubled abelian Chern-Simons theory, with the action \int B \wedge dA dualizing to two decoupled U(1) Chern-Simons terms upon partial integration and ; the non-abelian case provides a higher-dimensional analog to non-abelian Chern-Simons. Observables in BF theories are constructed as holonomies \Hol_\gamma(A) = P \exp \oint_\gamma A of the flat connection A along closed loops \gamma, which remain gauge-invariant and capture topological linking information. The partition function of the quantized BF theory on a closed oriented manifold M arises from localization on flat connections modulo gauge equivalence, weighted by contributions from zero modes and torsion factors. In four dimensions, BF theory with gauge group SO(3,1) or Spin(3,1) relates directly to in the Palatini () formulation, where A is the , B incorporates the frame field (tetrad) and enforces zero torsion, and the action reproduces the Einstein-Hilbert term upon solving constraints; quantization yields a TQFT encoding gravitational topological invariants. Generalizations of BF theories to two dimensions yield the Poisson sigma model, obtained as a deformation of the abelian BF action by introducing a Poisson bivector on the target manifold, resulting in a topological 2D sigma model whose path integral computes graph invariants and serves as a universal model for Poisson geometry in TQFT.

Applications and Extensions

Invariants of Manifolds and Knots

Topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) in three dimensions provide a framework for constructing invariants of knots and links through representations of quantum groups, yielding polynomials that distinguish embeddings in \mathbb{R}^3. In the Reshetikhin-Turaev construction, which formalizes the path integral approach of Chern-Simons theory mathematically, knot and link invariants arise as colored Jones polynomials when the underlying quantum group is U_q(\mathfrak{sl}_2), where representations label strands and the invariant is computed via braiding and twisting operators in the category of representations. For higher-rank quantum groups like U_q(\mathfrak{sl}_N), this generalizes to the HOMFLY polynomial, a two-variable invariant that encompasses the Jones polynomial as a specialization and captures more refined topological information about link crossings. These invariants are topological, unchanged under ambient isotopy, and derive from the modular tensor category structure imposed by the TQFT axioms. For closed 3-manifolds, TQFTs yield scalar invariants that are diffeomorphism-invariant. The Witten invariant, originating from the non-perturbative quantization of Chern-Simons theory with compact gauge group G, assigns to a manifold M a complex number computed via surgery on links colored by representations of G, providing a rigorous counterpart to the physical partition function. Complementing this, the Turaev-Viro invariant offers a combinatorial state-sum model for 3-manifolds, constructed from spherical fusion categories (such as those from quantum groups at roots of unity) without relying on orientations or framings, ensuring it is a positive real number invariant under PL homeomorphisms. Introduced in 1992, the Turaev-Viro model uses quantum 6j-symbols to sum over labelings of a triangulation of M, where edges, faces, and tetrahedra are assigned simple objects, morphisms, and balancing conditions from the category. A key feature of the Turaev-Viro invariant is its relation to quantum dimensions in the underlying category. Beyond classification, Turaev-Viro invariants connect to : the asymptotic growth of the state sum, governed by quantum 6j-symbols, relates to the of M through volume conjectures, where \lim_{r \to \infty} \frac{1}{r} \log |TV_r(M)| approximates the for M triangulated from tetrahedra. For instance, this has been verified for families of cusped manifolds, linking quantum invariants to classical via the analytic properties of 6j-symbols.

Modern Developments in Extended TQFTs

Extended topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) represent a major post-2000 advancement, extending the traditional framework by incorporating lower-dimensional submanifolds as defects to model interactions across multiple scales in bordism categories. These defects, such as codimension-(n-1) boundaries, allow TQFTs to assign algebraic data not only to manifolds but also to their singular structures, enriching the theory's descriptive power for physical systems with emergent boundaries or interfaces. A cornerstone of this development is the cobordism hypothesis, formalized by Jacob Lurie in , which classifies fully extended n-dimensional TQFTs as symmetric monoidal functors from the (∞,n)-category of framed bordisms to a target (∞,n)-category, fully determined by the image of the point object. This hypothesis relies on (∞,n)-categories for fully extended TQFTs, where the fully dualizable objects in the target category encode the theory's values on generating bordisms, ensuring invariance under diffeomorphisms and capturing higher-dimensional dualities. In this framework, bordisms enriched with tangles—generalizing knots and links—assign to (n-k)-defects representations in higher categories, where k indicates the defect's and the representations reflect and braiding rules among extended structures. During the 2010s, extended TQFTs gained prominence in for modeling , characterized by long-range entanglement and excitations like anyons, without conventional . The , introduced by , exemplifies this as a realization of the ℤ/2 BF theory, exhibiting Z_2 with ground-state degeneracy on non-trivial topologies and abelian anyons as excitations. This connection has illuminated gapped phases in materials, linking abstract TQFT constructs to experimentally accessible phenomena like fractional quantum Hall states. In the 2020s, extended TQFTs have further influenced through models for , where non-Abelian from Chern-Simons-like theories enable fault-tolerant encoding of qubits via fusion spaces and braiding . These models, such as those based on unitary modular tensor categories, support universal quantum gates with topological protection against local errors, advancing proposals for scalable hardware implementations. In February 2025, a Microsoft-led team, in collaboration with UC Santa Barbara physicists, unveiled the first eight-qubit topological quantum processor, creating a new and advancing experimental realizations of fault-tolerant topological qubits. Ongoing research emphasizes hybrid systems integrating anyonic defects with superconducting platforms to realize braiding operations experimentally.

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