* rge11x wrote:
> If I understand you correctly you seem to imply that since the
> thermodynamic potentials must obviously be single-valued, therefore the
> domain of the variables must be singly connected.
Exactly. If the thermodynamic potential f is multivalued, i.e. if
at x it has values f_1(x), f_2(x), ..., depending on which path
Gamma_1, Gamma_2, ... from 0 to x you chose to integrate changes of f,
then you must not identify the endpoints of the different paths but
distinguish x_1, which you reached via Gamma_1, from x_2, which you
reached via Gamma_2. Then the potential is a function f with
f_1 = f(x_1) and f_2 = f(x_2).
As simple, though unrealistic example: How did Magellan know that he
returned to Lisbon and not to a different Lisbon'? On the sphere, he
could have contracted his closed path to smaller and smaller paths
to the point Lisbon. But not on a torus. There he would have to
investigate all properties of Lisbon'. If one of them depended on the
winding number, this would prove Lisbon' to be different from Lisbon.