Twisted K-theory The adjoint action of the infinite projective unitary group is useful in geometric definitions of
twisted K-theory. Here the adjoint action of the infinite-dimensional \mathrm{PU}(\mathcal H) on either the
Fredholm operators or the infinite
unitary group is used. In geometrical constructions of twisted K-theory with twist
H, the \mathrm{PU}(\mathcal H) is the fiber of a bundle, and different twists
H correspond to different fibrations. As seen below, topologically \mathrm{PU}(\mathcal H) represents the
Eilenberg–Maclane space \mathrm{K}(\mathbb{Z}, 2), therefore the classifying space of \mathrm{PU}(\mathcal H) bundles is the Eilenberg–Maclane space \mathrm{K}(\mathbb{Z}, 3). \mathrm{K}(\mathbb{Z}, 3) is also the classifying space for the third integral
cohomology group, therefore \mathrm{PU}(\mathcal H) bundles are classified by the third integral cohomology. As a result, the possible twists
H of a twisted K-theory are precisely the elements of the third integral cohomology.
Pure Yang–Mills gauge theory In the pure Yang–Mills SU(
n)
gauge theory, which is a gauge theory with only
gluons and no fundamental matter, all fields transform in the adjoint of the gauge group SU(
n). The \mathbb{Z}/n center of SU(
n) commutes, being in the center, with SU(
n)-valued fields and so the adjoint action of the center is trivial. Therefore the gauge symmetry is the quotient of SU(
n) by \mathbb{Z}/n, which is PU(
n) and it acts on fields using the adjoint action described above. In this context, the distinction between SU(
n) and PU(
n) has an important physical consequence. SU(
n) is simply connected, but the fundamental group of PU(
n) is \mathbb{Z}/n, the cyclic group of order
n. Therefore a PU(
n) gauge theory with adjoint scalars will have nontrivial codimension 2
vortices in which the expectation values of the scalars wind around PU(
n)'s nontrivial cycle as one encircles the vortex. These vortices, therefore, also have charges in \mathbb{Z}/n, which implies that they attract each other and when
n come into contact they annihilate. An example of such a vortex is the Douglas–Shenker string in SU(
n)
Seiberg–Witten gauge theories. ==References==