homotopy hypothesis-theorem
delooping hypothesis-theorem
stabilization hypothesis-theorem
Meshes are towers of constructible stratified bundles whose fibers are points or framed stratified 1-manifolds. Meshes play a central role in the local description of directed (namely, framed) regular cell and dual-cell complexes.
Meshes are certain stratified spaces with additional structure (namely, structure that records spatial directions via a notion of framings). In the following definition, framings can be understood in the ordinary sense.
A 1-mesh is a framed contractible -manifold , , together with a stratification on whose strata are open -disks, .
Contractability implies that any 1-mesh framed embeds in standard framed : we call such embeddings mesh-trivializations.
To prepare for the definition of a bundle of 1-meshes, recall, the fundamental -category functor maps conical stratifications to their fundamental ∞-categories: for defining the latter, we work with entrance paths (which is the opposite convention to working with exit paths).
For simplicity, below one can replace the -functor with the ordinary fundamental poset functor . This yields an equivalent definition of -meshes (even though the definition of -mesh bundles will differ).
The following definition abstractly characterizes bundles of 1-meshes (see Rmk. for an elaboration). We assume all stratifications to be conical.
A 1-mesh bundle is a stratified bundle with 1-mesh fibers , for , and a fiberwise mesh-trivializing bundle embedding into the trivial -bundle over , such that
where denotes the restriction of to the union of strata in its domain whose non-empty intersections with fibers are all of dimension .
A concrete way to think about 1-mesh bundles is explained in Dorn-Douglas 2021, Ch. 4: a 1-mesh bundle is a stratified bundle of 1-meshes that can be trivialized in the trivial framed line bundle, such that the image of the trivialization has continuous upper and lower fiberwise bounds, and such that entrance paths in the base, with for a point in a -stratum in the fiber over , have unique lifts to entrance paths .
An -mesh bundle over a base stratification is a tower of 1-mesh bundles
If is the trivial stratification then the -mesh bundle is simply called an -mesh .
There are several equivalent phrasings and variations of the definitions of 1- and -mesh bundles. For instance, the assumption of contractability in the definition of 1-meshes can be weakened.
An -mesh is call closed if is compact, and open if .
An -mesh map is a stratified map of towers that fiberwise preserves the framing. (In fact, this makes mesh maps framed maps in the sense of framed directed spaces.)
Closed meshes are regular cell complexes (cf. Wikipedia entry). More generally, meshes are stratified -types (meaning the fundamental -categories are -truncated as -categories, i.e. equivalent to posets).
The fundamental categories of meshes are certain towers of poset maps ‘with structure’: this gives rise to a combinatorial notion called trusses. In fact, -meshes up to framed stratified homeomorphism are classified by -trusses (see at trusses for details), and -mesh bundles up to bundle isomorphism are classified by -truss bundles (and thus share the same classifying category).
As a consequence of truss duality and of the classification of meshes by trusses, we obtain a involutive dualization endofunctor on the category of meshes. This functor can be understood as a geometric dualization operation in the sense of Poincare duality. It maps open to closed meshes and vice versa (see Trm. ).
Christoph Dorn and Christopher Douglas, Manifold diagrams and tame tangles, 2022 (arXiv, latest)
Christoph Dorn and Christopher Douglas, Framed combinatorial topology, 2021 (arXiv, latest)
Last revised on May 12, 2023 at 10:01:53. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.