In the philosophy of the Grothendieck school, one starts with some category of “local models” of spaces, equips it with a subcanonical Grothendieck topology, , and enlarges to some category of sheaves of sets on the site playing the role of spaces. There are further generalizations to stacks and so on.
When doing this, we often find that properties of “local model spaces” have to be extended to properties of arbitrary spaces (i.e. sheaves on ). In fact it is most natural to do this in a relative situation, i.e. to talk about properties of morphisms rather than properties of objects, with an object regarded as the morphism . Thus, one of the main steps in the construction of the theory is to extend good classes of morphisms of local models to the category of spaces. Grothendieck axiomatizes the situation, actually for general presheaves.
Representable morphisms are also important in algebraic set theory and appear implicitly in the notion of category with families.
Let be a class of morphisms in a category which is closed under isomorphisms, i.e. it is replete when regarded as a full subcategory of the arrow category of .
A morphism of presheaves of sets on is said to be representable by a morphism in if for every morphism from a representable presheaf , the projection from the pullback is (the image under the Yoneda embedding of) a morphism in .
When is the class of all morphisms in , we simply say that is representable.
In geometrical contexts, we usually assume that is itself closed under pullbacks in , i.e. if is in and a morphism in , then the pullback exists and the projection is in . If has all pullbacks, then the class of all morphisms in satisfies this property.
If is closed under pullback, then a morphism between representable presheaves is representable by a morphism in if and only if it is itself (the image under the Yoneda embedding of) a morphism in . In this way, the class of morphisms in is extended to a class of morphisms in the category of presheaves of sets .
Last revised on March 4, 2024 at 11:42:04. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.