These lectures concern the properties of topological charge in gauge
theories and the physical effects which have been attributed to its
existence. No introduction to this subject would be adequate without a
discussion of the original work of Belavin, Polyakov, Schwarz, and
Tyupkin [1], of the beautiful calculation by 't Hooft [2,3], and of
the occurrence of 8-vacua [4-6]. Other important topics include recent
progress on solutions of the Yang-Mills equation of motion [7,8], and
the problem of parity and time-reversal invariance in strong
interactions [9] (axions [10,11], etc. ). In a few places, I have
strayed from the conventional line and in one important case, disagreed
with it. The im- portant remark concerns the connection between
chirality and topological charge first pointed out by 't Hooft [2]: in
the literature, the rule is repeatedly quoted with the wrong sign! If QS
is the generator for Abelian chiral transformations of massless quarks
with N flavours, the correct form of the rule is ßQs = - 2N {topological
charge} (1. 1) where ßQS means the out eigenvalue of QS minus the in
eigenvalue. The sign can be checked by consulting the standard WKB
calculation [2,3], rotating to Minkowski space, and observing that the
sum of right-handed chiralities of operators in a Green's function
equals -ßQS. The wrong sign is an automatie consequence of a standard
but incorrect derivation in which the axial charge is misidentified.