topology (point-set topology, point-free topology)
see also differential topology, algebraic topology, functional analysis and topological homotopy theory
Basic concepts
fiber space, space attachment
Extra stuff, structure, properties
Kolmogorov space, Hausdorff space, regular space, normal space
sequentially compact, countably compact, locally compact, sigma-compact, paracompact, countably paracompact, strongly compact
Examples
Basic statements
closed subspaces of compact Hausdorff spaces are equivalently compact subspaces
open subspaces of compact Hausdorff spaces are locally compact
compact spaces equivalently have converging subnet of every net
continuous metric space valued function on compact metric space is uniformly continuous
paracompact Hausdorff spaces equivalently admit subordinate partitions of unity
injective proper maps to locally compact spaces are equivalently the closed embeddings
locally compact and second-countable spaces are sigma-compact
Theorems
Analysis Theorems
The Sierpinski topos is the arrow category of Set.
Equivalently, this is the category of presheaves over the interval category , or equivalently the category of sheaves over the Sierpinski space
Yet another description is that it is the Freyd cover of Set.
Similarly, the Sierpinski (∞,1)-topos is the arrow (∞,1)-category of ∞Grpd.
Equivalently this is the (∞,1)-category of (∞,1)-presheaves on and equivalently the (∞,1)-category of (∞,1)-sheaves on :
Being a (∞,1)-category of (∞,1)-functors, the Sierpinski (∞,1)-topos is presented by any of the model structure on simplicial presheaves .
Specifically the Reedy model structure of simplicial presheaves on the interval category provides a univalent model for homotopy type theory in the Sierpinski -topos (Shulman)
We discuss the connectedness, locality and cohesion of the Sierpinski topos. We do so relative to an arbitrary base topos/base (∞,1)-topos , hence regard the global section geometric morphism
The Sierpinski topos is a cohesive topos.
The Sierpinski -topos is a cohesive (∞,1)-topos.
For the first statement, see the detailed discussion at cohesive topos here.
For the second statement, see the discussion at cohesive (∞,1)-topos here.
The fact that the Sierpienski -topos is, therefore, in particular
all follow directly from the fact that it is the image, under localic reflection, of the Sierpinski space (hence that it is 0-localic, its (-1)-truncation being the frame of opens of the Sierpinski space).
That space , in turn,
which implies the corresponding three properties of the Sierpinski -topos above.
By the discussion at cohesive (∞,1)-topos every such may be thought of as a fat point, the abstract cohesive blob. In this case, this fat point is the Sierpinski space. This space can be thought of as being the abstract “point with open neighbourhood”.
Accordingly, the objects of the Sierpinski -topos may be thought of as ∞-groupoids (relative to ) equipped with the notion of cohesion modeled on this: they are bundles of ∞-groupoids whose fibers are regarded as being geometrically contractible, in that
and so in particular
Hence these objects are discrete ∞-groupoids , to each of whose points may be attached a contractible cohesive blob with inner structure given by the -groupoid .
Accordingly, the underlying -groupoid of such a bundle is the union
of the discrete base space and the inner structure of the fibers.
The discrete object in the Sierpinski -topos on an object is the bundle
which is with “no cohesive blobs attached”.
Finally the codiscrete object in the Sierpinski -topos on an object is
the structure where all of is regarded as one single contractible cohesive ball.
The -adjunction unit
on is
The -counit on is
Hence the canonical natural transformation
from “points to pieces” is on simply the morphism itself
Therefore
the full sub-(∞,1)-category on those objects in for which “pieces have points”, hence those for which is an effective epimorphism, is the -category of effective epimorphisms in the ambient -topos, hence the -category of groupoid objects in the ambient -topos;
the full sub--category on the objects with “one point per piece” is the ambient -topos itself.
We unwind what some of the canonical structures in a cohesive (∞,1)-topos are when realized in the Sierpinski -topos.
A group object in is a morphism in of the form .
The corresponding flat coefficient object is
Hence the corresponding de Rham coefficient object is
where exhibits has an -group extension of by in .
The corresponding Maurer-Cartan form
is
exhibiting the -cocycle that classifies the extension .
The leftmost adjoint, , of the string of four adjoints exhibiting cohesion above itself possesses a left adjoint, . Taking this functor along with the leftmost three adjoints of this previous string yields a second quadruple adjunction which exhibits differential cohesion.
For any cohesive (∞,1)-topos, we have the “Sierpinski -topos relative to ” given by the arrow category , whose geometric morphism to the base topos is the domain cofibration
Conversely, we may think of as being an “infinitesimal thickening” of , as formalized at differential cohesion, where we regard
as exhibiting as an infinitesimal cohesive neighbourhood of (here denotes the endpoint inclusions, following the notation here).
(See also the corresponding examples at Q-category.)
We have for all that
For all in we have
which is indeed naturally equivalent to
Therefore an object of given by a morphism in is regarded by the differential cohesion as being an infinitesimal thickening of by the fibers of : where before we just had that the fibers of are “contractible cohesive thickenings” of the discrete object , now is “discrete relative to ” (hence not necessarily discrete in ) and the fibers are in addition regarded as being infinitesimal.
This is of course a very crude notion of infinitesimal extension. Notice for instance the following
With respect to the above differential cohesion , every morphism in is a formally étale morphism.
By definition, given a morphism , it is formally étale precisely if
is an (∞,1)-pullback.
By prop. the above square diagram in is
Since -pullbacks of -presheaves are computed objectwise, this is an -pullback in precisely if the “back and front sides”
and
are -pullbacks in . This is clearly always the case.
The adjunction forms the Aufhebung of for the Sierpinski topos.
The Sierpinski topos is the classifying topos for subterminal objects in toposes (see e.g. Johnstone 77, p. 117).
The generic subterminal inclusion in the Sierpinski topos is the unique inclusion of into .
The (non-full) inclusion
induces via restriction and right Kan extension an essential geometric morphism
of the Sierpinski topos into the classifying topos for pointed objects, . (This becomes a geometric embedding if we refined the Sierpinski topos of bundles to the topos of bundles with sections).
The pointed object in which is classified by this geometric morphism is (with the 0-sphere) with its canonical map from .
In summary, the generic subterminal object and the generic pointed object fit into a sequence of the form
According to the general idea of cohomology, for an (∞,1)-topos, and two objects, cohomology classes of with coefficients in are the connected components
Cohomology in the Sierpinski -topos, , corresponds to relative cohomology in .
Indeed, let and be two morphisms in . Then the relative cohomology of with coefficients in relative to these morphisms is the connected components of the -groupoid of relative cocycles
In terms of the codomain fibration, , intrinsic cohomology can be considered as nonabelian twisted cohomology (see there).
The Sierpinski topos is mentioned around remarks A2.1.12, B3.2.11 (p.83, p.387f) in
See also
The homotopy type theory of the Sierpinski -topos is discussed in
Cohesion of the Sierpinski -topos is discussed in section 2.2.4 of
Last revised on July 11, 2016 at 11:04:09. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.