(2,1)-quasitopos?
structures in a cohesive (∞,1)-topos
The notion of -sheaf (or ∞-stack or geometric homotopy type) is the analog in (∞,1)-category theory of the notion of sheaf (geometric type?) in ordinary category theory.
See (∞,1)-category of (∞,1)-sheaves for more.
Given an (∞,1)-site , let be the class of monomorphisms in the (∞,1)-category of (∞,1)-presheaves that correspond to covering (∞,1)-sieve?s
on objects , where is the (∞,1)-Yoneda embedding.
Then an (∞,1)-presheaf is an -sheaf if it is an -local object. That is, if for all such the morphism
is an equivalence. For a presheaf with values in an arbitrary ∞-category, we say it is a sheaf iff is a sheaf for every object of .
This is the analog of the ordinary sheaf condition for covering sieves. The ∞-groupoid is also called the descent-∞-groupoid of relative to the covering encoded by .
As in the 1-categorial case, the sheaf condition for a covering sieve can be translated into a condition on a covering family that generates it:
Let be a family of morphisms of that generate the sieve corresponding to , and let be the Čech nerve of . Then a presheaf is local with respect to iff the induced map is an equivalence.
Thus, a presheaf is a sheaf iff every covering sieve contains a generating family satisfying this condition. Spelling out the description of the Čech nerve, the condition is that we have
If has pullbacks, this simplifies to
and furthermore this formulation applies to presheaves with values in an arbitrary ∞-category.
Taking colimits of Čech nerve computes -truncations in , so is the subobject of corresponding to the sieve . We have
and so the theorem follows.
An (,1)-sheaf is also called an ∞-stack with values in ∞-groupoids.
The practice of writing “-sheaf” instead of ∞-stack is a rather reasonable one, since a stack is nothing but a 2-sheaf.
Notice however that there is ambiguity in what precisely one may mean by an -stack: it can be an -sheaf or more specifically a hypercomplete -sheaf. This is a distinction that only appears in (∞,1)-topos theory, not in (n,1)-topos theory for finite .
-sheaf / ∞-stack
homotopy level | n-truncation | homotopy theory | higher category theory | higher topos theory | homotopy type theory |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
h-level 0 | (-2)-truncated | contractible space | (-2)-groupoid | true/unit type/contractible type | |
h-level 1 | (-1)-truncated | contractible-if-inhabited | (-1)-groupoid/truth value | (0,1)-sheaf/ideal | mere proposition/h-proposition |
h-level 2 | 0-truncated | homotopy 0-type | 0-groupoid/set | sheaf | h-set |
h-level 3 | 1-truncated | homotopy 1-type | 1-groupoid/groupoid | (2,1)-sheaf/stack | h-groupoid |
h-level 4 | 2-truncated | homotopy 2-type | 2-groupoid | (3,1)-sheaf/2-stack | h-2-groupoid |
h-level 5 | 3-truncated | homotopy 3-type | 3-groupoid | (4,1)-sheaf/3-stack | h-3-groupoid |
h-level | -truncated | homotopy n-type | n-groupoid | (n+1,1)-sheaf/n-stack | h--groupoid |
h-level | untruncated | homotopy type | ∞-groupoid | (∞,1)-sheaf/∞-stack | h--groupoid |
Section 6.2.2 in
Last revised on February 4, 2023 at 20:42:54. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.