In mathematics and physics, a topological soliton or a topological defect is a solution of a system of partial differential equations or of a quantum field theoryhomotopically distinct from the vacuum solution; it can be proven to exist because the boundary conditionsentail the existence of homotopically distinct solutions. Typically, this occurs because the boundary on which the boundary conditions are specified has a non-trivial homotopy group which is preserved in differential equations; the solutions to the differential equations are then topologically distinct, and are classified by their homotopy class. Topological defects are not only stable against small s, but cannot decay or be undone or be de-tangled, precisely because there is no continuous transformation that will map them (homotopically) to a uniform or "trivial" solution.