Tying knots in particle physics
Minoru Eto, Yu Hamada, Muneto Nitta

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that knots can exist as meta-stable solitons within an extended standard model, suggesting a historical 'knot era' in the early Universe that could be tested via gravitational waves and linked to matter-antimatter asymmetry.
Contribution
It introduces a realistic extension of the standard model where knots appear as stable solitons, connecting Kelvin's old hypothesis to modern particle physics and cosmology.
Findings
Knots emerge as meta-stable solitons in an extended standard model.
A 'knot dominated era' in the early Universe is proposed.
Potential gravitational wave signatures of knots are discussed.
Abstract
Lord Kelvin's pioneering hypothesis that the identity of atoms is knots of vortices of the aether had a profound impact on the fields of mathematics and physics despite being subsequently refuted by experiments. While knot-like excitations emerge in various systems of condensed matter physics, the fundamental constituents of matter have been revealed to be elementary particles such as electrons and quarks, seemingly leaving no room for the appearance of knots in particle physics. Here, we show that knots indeed appear as meta-stable solitons in a realistic extension of the standard model of particle physics that provides the QCD axion and right-handed neutrinos. This result suggests that during the early Universe, a "knot dominated era" may have existed, where knots were a dominant component of the Universe, and this scenario can be tested through gravitational wave observations.…
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