Topology explained – and why you're a donut (2024)

You are a donut. Let me explain – it boils down to topology, or the maths of shapeshifting, stretching and pulling, but not tearing.

It makes strange connections between apparently unrelated objects, such as you and the donut.

It also explains exotic quantum behaviour in superfluids and superconductors. And it’s leading to strange new kinds of materials which scientists never thought possible.

Meanwhile, some physicists think topology is the key to the ultimate theory of the universe.

It was for these reasons that topology research bagged the Nobel Prize in Physics this week.

But what exactly is topology? And where does the physics fit in? Here’s what you need to know.

(W)hole numbers

Topologists define objects according to certain unchanging properties, such as the number of holes something might have.

In topology terms, a sphere is identical to a cube. They are both items with zero holes.

As the mathematics joke goes, a topologist is a person who can’t tell the difference between a donut and a coffee cup – they both have one hole.

Importantly, you can only have an integer number of holes (such as zero, one or two). You can’t have half a hole or a third of a hole. (It’s gotta be a ‘whole’ number, geddit?)

The number of holes in a thing is called a ‘topological invariant’. That just means you can’t change it without tearing.

Though these ideas started out in mathematics, lots of physics systems have analogous ‘invariant’ properties. Topological ideas led physicists to a whole new way to think about matter and the universe.

Basically, some stuff behaves a certain way because of how it is shaped, such as …

Superfluids

While water gushes freely from a faucet, honey slowly drip-drips from a spoon. What defines how easily a liquid can flow is called viscosity and it comes from how the liquid molecules bump into and tangle with one another.

But a superfluid is a liquid that has zero viscosity – it can flow with no resistance at all.

Liquid helium behaves this way when cooled to a couple of degrees above absolute zero (absolute zero is -273 °C). Its atoms adopt a kind of groupthink, acting as if they were a single object.


The result is you can stir a pot of liquid helium and the whirlpool would spin forever without slowing.

In the 1970s, two of this year’s physics Nobel winners, David Thouless and Michael Kosterlitz, realised that in thin puddles of a superfluid tiny whirlpools can pair up if they spin in opposite directions, like two meshing gears.

But above a critical temperature the two vortices break free from one another and sail away. At this temperature, the liquid helium suddenly changes its behaviour – it undergoes a topological phase transition.

A phase transition happens when something changes its properties, such as water freezing to ice, or your normally docile toddler suddenly throwing a tantrum.

Physicists have used these ideas in lots of other physics research. There is even a quantum theory of gravity (a possible ‘theory of everything’) that treats the fundamental vacuum as a kind of superfluid.

Quantum Hall effect

Usually, the relationship between a current and voltage is a property of a material known as resistance. That’s like the friction stopping electrons flowing through it.

In the 1980s, physicists found a baffling effect in flat materials called the quantum Hall effect where this simple relationship was totally broken.

Instead, the resistance jumped in steps. And, no matter what material was used, these steps were identical.

Topology explained the jumps as coming from the electrons in the material ganging together to form a quantum fluid. Like the superfluid, the behaviour of these electrons are defined only by shape, not by the material they are moving through.

Superconductivity

Weirder still are superconductors which carry current without any resistance at all. Just as superfluids can have ever-spinning whirlpools, superconductors can have ever-spinning currents.

These loops can be fashioned into quantum bits, or qubits, the building blocks of quantum computers.

Just like the twin whirlpools linking in a superfluid, electrons can pair up in a superconductor, and this helps them glide through on a free ride. Again, topology is crucial to understanding this behaviour.

Topological insulators

These are one of the weirdest kinds of materials discovered in recent years: they are both a conductor and an insulator.

Inside the material, electrons are trapped in local positions, but on the outer surface the electrons can move relatively freely.

Again, this contradictory behaviour arises from shape, and is explained by topology.

String theory

In the esoteric world of superstring theory, physicists attempt to explain all particles and all forces as arising from the vibration of tiny strings much smaller than any known particle. And topology plays a major role.

The strings can be different shapes, not just simple loops. These shapes define what kind of vibrations each string can undergo – kind of like the different notes of a guitar string held at different positions. And the notes define a string’s properties, whether it’s an electron or a quark.

The theory imagines a particular microscopic structure of spacetime with at least six extra dimensions of tangled together at each point all around us.

The way the dimensions are wrapped up is a topological problem.

For instance, the number of holes determines how many families of vibrations a string can feel, and thus how many families of particles exist. Since there are three families of particles, string theorists say the universe must made of three-holed space-time.

Back to breakfast

A donut has one continuous hole through it, and so do you (it starts at your mouth and finishes at the other end).

That’s why, topologically speaking, you and a donut are identical.

Topology explained –and why you're a donut (2)

Topology explained – and why you're a donut (2024)

FAQs

What is the topology of a donut? ›

In the field of topology, a torus is any topological space that is homeomorphic to a torus. The surface of a coffee cup and a doughnut are both topological tori with genus one.

Are humans a donut topology? ›

Originally Answered: Is the topology of humans the same as that of a doughnut? No. The sinuses have many complex holes and pathways, which distinguish the head of a human being from that of a donut. If this were disregarded, yes, it would be a match.

What is topologically equivalent to a donut? ›

A donut and a coffee mug are topologically equivalent, each possessing one “hole,” and both are topologically distinct from a baseball. Indeed, for some solid-state materials, certain physical properties are defined by their topological indices (or topological invariants) instead of their fine details.

What is topology in simple words? ›

Topology is a kind of math — it's the study of shapes that can be stretched and moved while points on the shape continue to stay close to each other. In the branch of geometry known as topology, two objects are equivalent if you can make them resemble each other by stretching, bending, or twisting them.

What topology is in a circle? ›

Topological definition

The circle is the one-dimensional hypersphere (the 1-sphere). In topology, a circle is not limited to the geometric concept, but to all of its homeomorphisms.

What is a ring topology example? ›

Ring topology is a type of network configuration where devices are connected in a circular manner, forming a closed loop. In this setup, each device is connected to exactly two other devices, creating a continuous pathway for data transmission.

Can a planet be a donut? ›

A donut planet, also known as a toroid planet or toroidal planet, is a theoretical type of planet that resembles a donut, rather than a typical sphere. While a donut planet is extremely unlikely to naturally exist anywhere in the universe, it is theoretically possible for such a planet to exist.

Where is topology used in real life? ›

Topology is used in many branches of mathematics, such as differentiable equations, dynamical systems, knot theory, and Riemann surfaces in complex analysis. It is also used in string theory in physics, and for describing the space-time structure of universe.

What do you call a donut without a hole? ›

Jelly Doughnut

Jelly doughnuts are traditionally a yeast doughnut without a hole in the middle, as the fruit-filling gets piped into the center.

Is a donut a torus? ›

A solid torus is often simply called a torus. A solid torus is made by rotating a disk (a filled-in circle) around a line. Common objects that have the shape of a solid torus are a doughnut, a bagel and an O-ring.

Do donuts have two holes? ›

Supposedly donuts have one hole but sometimes two depending on the baker and how the donut was made..

What is the summary of topology? ›

topology , In mathematics, the study of the properties of a geometric object that remains unchanged by deformations such as bending, stretching, or squeezing but not breaking.

What are two examples of topology? ›

Topology considers two objects the same if you can deform one into the other without tearing or cutting: only bending, stretching and squeezing is allowed. The most famous example is that, topologically speaking, a ball is the same as a bowl, and a donut the same as a coffee cup.

Who invented topology? ›

The term "topology" was introduced by Johann Benedict Listing in 1847, although he had used the term in correspondence some years earlier instead of previously used "Analysis situs". The foundation of this science, for a space of any dimension, was created by Henri Poincaré.

What is the topology of coffee mug and donut? ›

In topology, the most basic equivalence is a homeomorphism, which allows spaces that appear quite different in most other subjects to be declared equivalent in topology. The surfaces of a donut and a coffee cup (with one handle) are considered equivalent because both have a single hole.

What is the topology of a sphere torus? ›

The sphere and torus are topologically distinct. On the surface of a donut there are loops one can draw that do not separate the surface into disjoint pieces. The loop that goes around the donut like an armband in Figure 7.5. 1 is one such loop.

What is a donut shape structure? ›

A torus – or donut – is formed by rotating a circle about an axis that lies in the plane and outside of the circle. Arguably, the donut is not the most common shape in nature. That distinction may belong to the sphere of rain drops or the hexagon of honeycomb and snowflakes.

Is a topology a ring? ›

A ring topology is a network design where connected devices form a circular data channel. Each networked device is linked to two more ones by two points on a circle. A ring network is a collective term for the devices arranged in a ring topology.

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