Non-abelian anyons have more complicated fusion relations. As a rule, in a system with non-abelian anyons, there is a composite particle whose statistics label is not uniquely determined by the statistics labels of its components, but rather exists as a
quantum superposition (this is completely analogous to how two fermions known to each have spin 1/2 and 3/2 are together in quantum superposition of total spin 1 and 2). If the overall statistics of the fusion of all of several anyons is known, there is still ambiguity in the fusion of some subsets of those anyons, and each possibility is a unique
quantum state. These multiple states provide a
Hilbert space on which quantum computation can be done. Specifically, two non-abelian anyons labeled a and b have a fusion rule given by a \times b = \sum_c N^c_{ab} c , where the formal sum over c goes over all labels of possible anyon types in the system (as well as the trivial label c = 1 denoting no particles), and each N^c_{ab} is a nonnegative
integer which denotes how many distinct quantum states there are in which a and b fuse into c (This is true in the abelian case as well, except in that case, for each a and b, there is one type of anyon c for which N^c_{ab}=1 and for all other c, N^c_{ab}=0 .) Each anyon type a should also have a conjugate antiparticle \bar{a} among the list of possible anyon types, such that N^1_{a \bar{a}} \neq 0 , i.e. it can annihilate with its antiparticle. The anyon type label does not specify all of the information about the anyon, but the information that it does indicate is topologically invariant under local perturbations. For example, the
Fibonacci anyon system, one of the simplest, consists of labels 1 and \tau ( \tau denotes a Fibonacci anyon), which satisfy fusion rule \tau \times \tau = 1 + \tau (corresponding to N^{\tau}_{\tau \tau}=N^{1}_{\tau \tau} = 1) as well as the trivial rules \tau \times 1= \tau and 1 \times 1 = 1 (corresponding to N^{\tau}_{\tau 1}=N^{1}_{1 1} = 1). The
Ising anyon system consists of labels 1 , \psi and \sigma , which satisfy fusion rules \sigma \times \sigma = 1 + \psi , \sigma \times \psi= \sigma , and the trivial rules. The \times operation is commutative and associative, as it must be to physically make sense with fused anyons. Furthermore, it is possible to view the N^c_{ab} coefficients as matrix entries (N_a)^c_b of a matrix with row and column indices b and c; then the largest eigenvalue of this matrix is known as the quantum dimension d_a of anyon type a. Fusion rules can also be generalized to consider in how many ways N^{c}_{a_1, a_2, \ldots a_m} a collection a_1, a_2, \ldots a_m can be fused to a final anyon type c . ==Hilbert spaces of fusion processes==