The concept of pushout product is a natural kind of pairing operation on morphisms in categories equipped with a pairing operation on objects (e.g. a tensor product) and having pushouts. It sends two morphisms to the universal morphism out of the pushout of the span-diagram they form by pairing their domain objects. Regarding arrows in a category as diagrams with domain the interval category, and giving the interval category the natural monoidal product, this is a kind of Day convolution tensor product with the natural copowering over Set replacing a tensor in the coend.
Consider
three categories ,
(often taken to be the same),
a functor out of the product category
(often being the tensor product on a monoidal category or the tensoring of an enriched category over its cosmos).
Assume that has all pushouts.
in
in ,
their pushout product is the morphism in
out of the pushout of the two morphisms, which is induced by the universal property of the pushout by the following commuting diagram (induced, in turn, from the functoriality of the tensor product as a functor on a product category):
For any category and any class of its morphisms, write for the -injective morphisms and for the -projective morphisms.
Let be a symmetric closed monoidal category with finite limits and finite colimits, and let be two classes of its morphisms.
Then under pushout product :
By a little Joyal-Tierney calculus.
In the context of monoidal model category theory, prop. implies that for checking the pushout-product axiom in the case of cofibrantly generated model categories it is sufficient to check it on generating cofibrations.
It is instructive to consider the elementary case of pushout-products in Sets with respect to the Cartesian product
For a pair of maps/functions of sets
the relevant pushout diagram is
where the dashed arrow denotes the pushout-product map.
The pushout-product of sets may be described as the quotient set
(where each variable ranges over the set denoted by the corresponding capital symbol).
Moreover, if we denote the equivalence class of by , etc. then the coprojections into the pushout product are given by
and the pushout-product map itself (the dashed arrow) is given as follows:
More informatively, the fibers of the pushout-product map over any look as follows:
where
“” denotes the singleton set
“” denotes forming preimages
“” denotes forming complements.
We discuss in more detail how to obtain the fibers (2).
To see the first case: By the assumption that we find and hence by (1) we find . But since also there is also and hence
This shows that all elements of the form in the fiber are in fact equal, and also equal to , which, by the symmetric argument, are in turn equal for all choices of . Therefore there is one single element in the fiber of the pushout-product map, in this case.
To see the second case: Since is not in the image of , by (1) the elements in the fiber can only be of the form with . None of these is contained in the relation – again by the assumption that is not in the image of – and hence they are all distinct.
The third case works the same way, under swapping .
(Pushout-product of injections of sets)
In the special case that both maps are injections, the fibers appearing in (2) are all (-1)-truncated (either empty sets or singleton sets).
This shows that the pushout-product map of two injections of Sets is itself an injection. The following graphics illustrates this for interval-subsets of the plane:
For , let
be the canonical sphere inclusions in Top (the generating cofibrations of the classical model structure on topological spaces). Their pushout product (with respect to cartesian product of topological spaces) is given by addition of indices:
Let moreover
Then
To see this, it is profitable to model n-disks and n-spheres, up to homeomorphism, as n-cubes and their boundaries.
To see the idea of the proof, consider the situation in low dimensions, where one readily sees that
and
Generally, may be represented as the space of -tuples of elements in , and as the suspace of tuples for which at least one of the coordinates is equal to 0 or to 1.
Accordingly is the spaces of -tuples, such that one of the first coordinates is equal to 0 or 1, and hence
And of course it is clear that . This shows the first case.
For the second, use that is contractible to in , and that is a subspace of .
The relations in example are the key in proving that the classical model structure on topological spaces (on compactly generated topological spaces) is an enriched model category over itself. See there at topological enrichment for more.
(pushout-product with initial morphism is tensor product)
With respect to a bifunctor which preserves initial objects in, say, the first variable, the pushout-product with an initial morphisms is given by :
(Of course, in applications is typically a closed tensor product which hence even preserves all colimits in each variable separately.)
This is because the defining pushout diagram now looks like this:
where the top row is the unique map on the initial object by assumption whence its pushout to the bottom horizontal morphism is also an identity, as shown.
(pushout product with identity is identity morphism)
With respect to any bifunctor , the pushout-product with with an identity morphism is an identity morphism:
This is because the defining pushout-diagram, say in the first case, now looks like this: because the top morphism is an identity morphism by assumption, so that also its pushout is given by an identity, as shown.
The analogous argument applies in the other variable.
With respect to any bifunctor the pushout-product of two split epimorphisms
is an isomorphism, in that the following commuting square is already a pushout
Given any cocone under the given span, such as shown in the outer part of the following diagram we need to see that there is a unique dashed morphism making the diagram commute, as shown.
Now, by assumption, we have sections
from which we obtain a candidate dashed morphism by setting:
This does make the bottom triangle commute
and analogously for the right triangle
and given any making the diagram commute, we find that it equals the previous one:
pullback power– the dual concept
Pushout-products are prominently discussed in the context of monoidal model category-theory (where they appear in a pushout-product axiom), and here a key motivation are constructions of symmetric monoidal smash products of spectra. See for instance:
Last revised on June 1, 2023 at 10:37:48. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.