I'm looking for a smooth map from the 3-torus to $SU(2)$, i.e. some $f:\mathbb{T}^{3}\to SU(2)$, that is injective near identity, $f^{-1}(1)=\{p\}$. I know that the homotopy classes of maps from $\mathbb{T}^{3}\to S^{3}\simeq SU(2)$ are labeled by $\mathbb{Z}$, but I need to find an explicit example (I think of the $n=1$ class) for my work.
If there's an easy, explicit construction, I'm all for it. Below I've tabulated my attempt at first embedding $\mathbb{T}^{2}$ in $\mathbb{R}^{3}$ and projecting to the unit sphere, hoping that the same idea works with $\mathbb{T}^{3}$ in $\mathbb{R}^{4}$.
Because I can't think in four dimensions, my initial idea was to knock off one dimension from both spaces and try to find a map from a 2-torus to $S^{2}$ that satisfies this.
So I've got a Torus parameterized as: $$ x=(R+r\cos\theta)\cos\phi-R,\hspace{.5cm} y=(R+r\cos\theta)\sin\phi, \hspace{.5cm}z=r\sin\theta$$ Crucially, this torus has the origin inside of it, so that when I project to the unit sphere $$ (x, y, z)\mapsto \frac{(x, y, z)}{\sqrt{x^{2}+y^{2}+z^{2}}}$$ only one point ($\theta=0, \phi=0$) is mapped to $(1, 0, 0)$ on the unit sphere. So I can map $\mathbb{T}^{2}\to S^{2}$ by: $$(\theta, \phi) \mapsto \frac{(x, y, z)}{\sqrt{x^{2}+y^{2}+z^{2}}}$$
(1) I'm not sure that this is even a smooth map, even though it seems like it should be. The issue is that one ends up with a $\sqrt{...+\cos\theta}$ in the denominator, which contains arbitrarily high powers of $\cos\theta$. (Ultimately I'm using this for a physics application which needs a local formulation, and $\theta$ will be a momentum, so I need there to be a finite maximum power of $\cos\theta$, $\sin\theta$, $\cos\phi$, etc)
(2) If this lower dimensional case is smooth, can the same idea be extended to a map $\mathbb{T}^{3}\to SU(2)$? Can one parameterize $\mathbb{T}^{3}$ in a similar way to $\mathbb{T}^{2}$, then project to the unit sphere, and be done with it?
(3) Is there an altogether better way to construct a map from $\mathbb{T}^{3}\to SU(2)$ that avoids all of this messiness?