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Non-Invertible Symmetries as Condensation Defects in Finite-Group Gauge Theories

by Clay Cordova, Davi Bastos Costa, Po-Shen Hsin

Submission summary

Authors (as registered SciPost users): Davi Bastos Costa · Po-Shen Hsin
Submission information
Preprint Link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.16681v1  (pdf)
Date submitted: 2025-01-28 23:26
Submitted by: Bastos Costa, Davi
Submitted to: SciPost Physics
Ontological classification
Academic field: Physics
Specialties:
  • Condensed Matter Physics - Theory
  • High-Energy Physics - Theory
Approach: Theoretical

Abstract

In recent work, we developed a method to construct invertible and non-invertible symmetries of finite-group gauge theories as topological domain walls on the lattice. In the present work, we consider abelian and non-abelian finite-group gauge theories in general spacetime dimension, and demonstrate how to realize these symmetries as condensation defects, i.e., as suitable insertions of lower dimensional topological operators. We then compute the fusion rules and action of these symmetries using their condensation expression and the algebraic properties of the lower dimensional objects that make them. We illustrate the discussion in ZN gauge theory, where we derive the correspondence between domain walls, labeled by subgroups and actions for the doubled gauge group, and higher gauging condensation defects, labeled by subalgebras of the global symmetry. As a primary application, we obtain the condensation expression for the invertible symmetries of abelian gauge theories defined by outer automorphisms of the gauge group. We also show how to use these ideas to derive the action for certain non-abelian groups. For instance, one can obtain the action for the Dihedral group D4 by gauging a swap symmetry of Z2×Z2 gauge theory.

Author indications on fulfilling journal expectations

  • Provide a novel and synergetic link between different research areas.
  • Open a new pathway in an existing or a new research direction, with clear potential for multi-pronged follow-up work
  • Detail a groundbreaking theoretical/experimental/computational discovery
  • Present a breakthrough on a previously-identified and long-standing research stumbling block
Current status:
In refereeing

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