homotopy theory, (∞,1)-category theory, homotopy type theory
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The notion of essential fiber of a functor is an enhancement of the naive notion of fiber which, for functors, would violate the principle of equivalence. It is a category-theoretic version of a homotopy fiber.
The essential fiber of a functor over an object can be thought of as the category of ways that can arise from applying to some object in .
For be a functor and an object the essential fiber of over is the category whose:
objects are pairs where is an object and is an isomorphism,
morphisms are morphisms in such that ,
composition operation is the evident one.
The notion of essential fiber in Def. can be identified with that of the pseudopullback or “isocomma object” of along the functor from the terminal category which picks out the object :
Moreover, the notion can also be identified with a homotopy fiber in the canonical model structure on Cat.
Finally, with groupoids identified as homotopy 1-types, the essential fiber of a functor between groupoids and thought of as -groupoids actually coincides with its homotopy fiber in the classical sense of homotopy theory (well-defined up to weak homotopy equivalence).
If is an isofibration, then any of its essential fibers (Def. ) is equivalent to the corresponding strict fiber. This includes the case when is a Grothendieck fibration.
On the other hand, when is a Street fibration (the version of Grothendieck fibration which respects the principle of equivalence), then essential fibers do not coincide with strict fibers, and essential fibers are the more useful notion. In particular, the correspondence between Grothendieck fibrations and pseudofunctors only goes through for Street fibrations if one defines the pseudofunctor using essential fibers.
Some properties of a functor are reflected in properties of its essential fibers (Def. ). A good intuition is that the more a functor resembles an injective function, the simpler its essential fibers are.
A functor is conservative if and only if all its essential fibers are groupoids.
If the functor is faithful, all its essential fibers are preorders. (The converse is not true.)
and thus:
If the functor is faithful and conservative then all its essential fibers are equivalent to discrete categories.
There typically is a nontrivial preorder of ways that a set can arise as the underlying set of a topological space, because the forgetful functor from to is faithful but not conservative.
On the other hand, there is a mere set (i.e., a discrete category) of ways that a set can arise as the underlying set of a group, because the forgetful functor from to , being monadic, is both faithful and conservative.
The automorphism group of always acts on the essential fiber of .
For example, on objects, acts to send to .
When the essential fiber is essentially a set as in proposition , this allows us to describe the essential fiber as a union of orbits:
If the functor is faithful and conservative, the essential fiber over is equivalent to the discrete category on the set
where ranges over one representative of each isomorphism class in whose image is the isomorphism class of .
When is not only faithful and conservative but also injective on isomorphism classes, there is at most one isomorphism class in whose image is the isomorphism class of . Thus the coproduct in proposition has at most one summand, and the automorphism group of acts transitively on the relevant set:
If the functor is faithful, conservative and it is injective on isomorphism classes, then for any , the essential fiber over is equivalent to the discrete category on the set
Thus acts transitively on this set.
The forgetful functor from complex vector spaces to real vector spaces is faithful, conservative and injective on isomorphism classes. The essential fiber over a given real vector space is the set of complex structures on this vector space, and if this vector space is , proposition implies that this set of complex structures is isomorphic to (the underlying set of) the coset space
The above results on essential fibers were proved in this discussion:
Last revised on January 30, 2024 at 08:28:59. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.