nLab infinity-anafunctor

Redirected from "∞-anafunctor".
Contents

Context

Higher category theory

higher category theory

Basic concepts

Basic theorems

Applications

Models

Morphisms

Functors

Universal constructions

Extra properties and structure

1-categorical presentations

Homotopy theory

homotopy theory, (∞,1)-category theory, homotopy type theory

flavors: stable, equivariant, rational, p-adic, proper, geometric, cohesive, directed

models: topological, simplicial, localic, …

see also algebraic topology

Introductions

Definitions

Paths and cylinders

Homotopy groups

Basic facts

Theorems

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Contents

Idea

An \infty-anafunctor is a model for a morphism in an (∞,1)-category H\mathbf{H} of structured (n,r)-categories notably of ∞-stacks with values in (n,r)-categories in terms of spans of ordinary morphisms (of presheaves, notably). It generalizes the notion of 1-anafunctor.

The category with weak equivalences that models the (n,r)(n,r)-categories in questions should be refined to the structure of a category of fibrant objects for \infty-anafunctors to be a good model

In such a model [C op,(n,r)Cat][C^{op},(n,r)Cat] for H\mathbf{H}, a morphism in H\mathbf{H} between XX to YY is presented by a span

X^ Y X \array{ \hat X &\to& Y \\ \downarrow^{\mathrlap{\simeq}} \\ X }

of presheaves. This is an \infty-anafunctor, generalizing the notion of anafunctor.

The point is that this is a special simple form of the more general and more complicated constructions in simplicial localization, which require zig-zags of morphisms of greater length than a single span.

Definition

An \infty-anafunctor g:CDg : C \to D is a span

C^ g D C \array{ \hat C &\stackrel{g}{\to}& D \\ \downarrow \\ C }

of whose left leg is an acyclic fibration with

Given two \infty-anafunctors CgDC \stackrel{g}{\to} D and DhED \stackrel{h}{\to} E their composite \infty-anafunctor is given by the span

g *D^ D h E C^ g D C, \array{ g^* \hat D &\to& D &\stackrel{h}{\to}& E \\ \downarrow && \downarrow \\ \hat C &\stackrel{g}{\to}& D \\ \downarrow \\ C } \,,

where the top left square is a pullback square. Notice that acyclic fibrations are preserved under pullback and closed under composition, so that the total vertical ω\omega-functor on the left is indeed again an acyclic fibration and hence the total span here indeed again an \infty-anafunctor.

While this definition of composition is in itself well defined, it is not quite associative: the two ways of composing three spans representing \infty-anafunctors this way in general produces two spans out of different – albeit isomorphic – hypercovers.

Of course the precise choice of hypercover C^\hat C of CC is not an essential datum: two \infty-anafuntors should be regarded as equivalent if they become equal after pulled back to a joint hypercover. This is formalized in the following definition:

(…)

Examples

Ambient contexts

Any of the algebraic models for higher categories provide categories of fibrant objects, such as the folk model structures.

But also thopse simplicial sheaves that are stalkwise Kan complexes works, and notably the full subcategories on fibrant objects in one of the model structure on simplicial presheaves and more generally of model structures on homotopical presheaves model arbitrary \infty-stacks with values in (n,r)-categories.

Cocycles for principal \infty-bundles

For G[C op,sSet]G \in [C^{op}, sSet] a model in simplicial presheaves for an ∞-group in H\mathbf{H} and BG[C op,sSet]\mathbf{B}G \in [C^{op}, sSet] its fibrant delooping object, an \infty-anafunctor

X^ g BG X \array{ \hat X &\stackrel{g}{\to}& \mathbf{B}G \\ \downarrow \\ X }

is a cocycle for a GG-principal ∞-bundle. Here X^X\hat X \to X is essentially the hypercover on which the cocycle is defined.

More precisely, in order for this to be a useful cocycle presentation we either use the structure of a category of fibrant objects given by stalk-wise fibrant simplicial presheaves as in (Brown), or if we use the full subcategory on fibrant objects of a local model structure on simplicial presheaves then we should take the site CC to contain only “elementary test objects” so that BG\mathbf{B}G has a chance of being fibrant. This issue of big versus small sites and how this shifts the amount of fibrant and cofibrant objects around is discussed in some detail at ∞-Lie groupoid in the context of sites of smooth test spaces.

An introductory exposition to how such spans are Cech cohomology cocycles see for instance ∞-Chern-Weil-theory introduction.

The principal ∞-bundle classified by such an \infty-anafuntor is the (ordinary!) pullback

P EG X^ g BG X, \array{ P &\to& \mathbf{E}G \\ \downarrow && \downarrow \\ \hat X &\stackrel{g}{\to}& \mathbf{B}G \\ \downarrow \\ X } \,,

where EG\mathbf{E}G is the universal principal ∞-bundle, itself defined by the pullback

EG * BG I BG BG. \array{ \mathbf{E}G &\to& * \\ \downarrow && \downarrow \\ \mathbf{B}G^I &\to& \mathbf{B}G \\ \downarrow \\ \mathbf{B}G } \,.

Properties

Relation to \infty-groupoid bibundles

Ordinary anafunctors of Lie groupoids can equivalently be modeled by groupoid principal bundles that are bibundles.

The generalization of this statement to \infty-anafunctors is given in (BlohmannZhu).

References

For (,0)(\infty,0)-anafunctors modeling morphisms in a hypercomplete (∞,1)-topos this is in

A result relating (,0)(\infty,0)-anafunctors to ∞-groupoid-bibundles has been announced by

Last revised on June 11, 2022 at 16:45:46. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.