I am not sure if I know the correct answer (as I am a student my self), but I will try (and if I am wrong, someone please correct me).
The first thing that took me some time to figure out is what they mean by adjoint representation. In Georgi's book he defines the adjoint representation of a generator as: [Ti]jk≡−ifijk
which is equivalent to the
adjoint representation of a Lie algebra. However, when discussing monopole, they actually mean the
adjoint representation of a Lie group . This means that
ϕ takes values in the Lie algebra (the vector space formed by the generators) and can be expressed in terms of the generators in an
arbitrary representation:
ϕ=ϕata
where
ta denote the generators in an arbitrary representation (and there is an implicit sum over repeated indices).
Now, let us look at the simplest example, which is the bosonic part of the SU(2) gauge invariant Georgi-Glashow model: L=18Tr(FμνFμν)−14Tr(DμϕDμϕ)−λ4(1−ϕaϕa)2
We can write the kinetic and potential energy,
T and
V, as:
T=∫(−14Tr(F0iF0i)−14Tr(D0ϕD0ϕ))d3x
and:
V=∫(−18Tr(FijFij)−14Tr(DiϕDiϕ)+λ4(1−ϕaϕa)2)d3x
where we used
L=∫Ld3x=T−V. In order to get finite energy solutions we have to impose boundary conditions such that the total energy of the model vanished at spatial infinity. It should be clear that one of the requirements to ensure that the energy vanishes is:
ϕaϕa=1
This implies that the Higgs vacuum corresponds to an infinite amount of degenerate vacuum values lying on the surface of a unit two-sphere in field space, which we will denote by
S21. Furthermore, by imposing the aforementioned finite energy boundary condition, this gives rise to the following map:
ϕ:S2∞→S21
where
S2∞ denotes the two-sphere associated with spatial infinity (in 3 dimensions). This is in fact the definition of the winding number (or degree) between two two-dimensional spheres and is therefore classified by
π2(S2)=Z (and it is in theory possible to construct topological solitons). Now, if
ϕ was in the fundamental representation, then I don't think it is possible to construct these topological solitons.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-08-22 05:03 (UCT), posted by SE-user Hunter