Abstract

A 2 n-dimensional completely integrable system gives rise to a singular fibration whose generic fiber is the n-torus T n . In the classical setting, it is possible to define a parallel transport of elements of the fundamental group of a fiber along a path, when the path describes a loop around a singular fiber, it defines an automorphism of π 1 ( T n ) called monodromy transformation [J.J. Duistermaat, On global action-angle coordinates, Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics 33 (6) (1980) 687–706]. Some systems give rise to a non-classical setting, in which the path can wind around a singular fiber only by crossing a codimension 1 submanifold of special singular fibers (a wall), in this case a non-classical parallel transport can be defined on a subgroup of the fundamental group. This gives rise to what is known as monodromy with fractional coefficients [N. Nekhoroshev, D. Sadovskiì, B. Zhilinskiì, Fractional monodromy of resonant classical and quantum oscillators, Comptes Rendus Mathematique 335 (11) (2002) 985–988]. In this article, we give a precise meaning to the non-classical parallel transport. In particular we show that it is a homologic process and not a homotopic one. We justify this statement by describing the type of singular fibers that generate a wall that can be crossed, by describing the parallel transport in a semi-local neighbourhood of the wall of singularities, and by producing a family of 4-dimensional examples.

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