nLab weak limit

Redirected from "weak pullbacks".
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Contents

Idea

A weak limit for a diagram in a category is a cone over that diagram which satisfies the existence property of a limit but not necessarily the uniqueness. The dual concept is a weak colimit.

Beware that “weak” here does not correspond to that in “weak n-category”, in particular it does not refer to homotopy limits. Nevertheless, there is a relation, see below. It is due to this relation that weak limits in homotopy categories play a key role in the Brown representability theorem.

Weak pullbacks

A weak pullback of a cospan

AfCgB A\overset{f}{\to} C \overset{g}{\leftarrow} B

(in some category) is a commutative square

P p A q f B g C \array{ P & \overset{p}{\to} & A \\ {}^{\mathllap{q}} \downarrow && \downarrow^{\mathrlap{f}} \\ B & \overset{g}{\to} & C }

such that for every commuting square

X x A y f B g C\array{ X & \overset{x}{\to} & A\\ {}^{\mathllap{y}} \downarrow && \downarrow^{\mathrlap{f}}\\ B & \overset{g}{\to} & C}

there exists a morphism h::XPh: \colon X\to P, not necessarily unique, such that x=hpx = h p and y=hqy = h q;

If the actual pullback A×CBA \underset{C}{\times}B exists, then this condition means equivalently that the universal morphism

PA×CB P \longrightarrow A \underset{C}{\times}B

is a split epimorphism.

Weak terminal objects

Every inhabited set is a weak terminal object in Set, since there always exists a function from any set to any inhabited set. But only a singleton is a terminal object.

Projective objects and exact completion

In any category with finite limits and enough projectives, the full subcategory of projective objects has weak finite limits. For example, given a cospan AfCgBA\overset{f}{\to} C \overset{g}{\leftarrow} B of projective objects, let PA× CBP\to A\times_C B be a projective cover of the actual pullback; then any square

X x A y f B g C\array{ X & \overset{x}{\to} & A\\ ^y \downarrow && \downarrow ^f\\ B & \overset{g}{\to} & C}

with XX projective induces a morphism XA× CBX\to A\times_C B, which lifts to a morphism XPX\to P since XX is projective.

Conversely, from any category with weak finite limits one can construct an exact completion in which the original category sits as the projective objects, and the exact categories constructible in this way are precisely those having enough projectives.

Relation to homotopy limits

Unlike usages of ‘weak’ in terms like weak n-category, a weak limit is not like a homotopy limit or a 2-limit, which satisfy uniqueness (as well as existence) albeit only up to higher homotopies or equivalences.

However, some homotopy limits induce the corresponding type of weak limit in the corresponding homotopy category. For example, suppose that

P p A q f B g C\array{ P & \overset{p}{\to} & A\\ ^q \downarrow && \downarrow ^f\\ B & \overset{g}{\to} & C}

is a homotopy pullback in some category MM having a notion of homotopy, such as a model category. In particular, this square commutes up to homotopy, and thus it commutes in the homotopy category Ho(M)Ho(M). Then any square

X x A y f B g C\array{ X & \overset{x}{\to} & A\\ ^y \downarrow && \downarrow ^f\\ B & \overset{g}{\to} & C}

that commutes in Ho(M)Ho(M) commutes up to homotopy in MM, and thus (by the (“local”) universal property of homotopy pullbacks), there is a map h:XPh:X\to P and homotopies phxp h \simeq x and qhyq h\simeq y; thus the given square is a weak pullback in Ho(M)Ho(M). While the universal property of a homotopy pullback means that hh is unique up to homotopy, this is only true for a given choice of homotopy fxgyf x \simeq g y, and different such homotopies can induce inequivalent hh‘s. Thus in Ho(M)Ho(M), which remembers only the existence of homotopies, we have only a weak pullback.

Note, though, that not all homotopy limits produce weak limits in the homotopy category, because in general it will not be possible to lift a cone that commutes in Ho(M)Ho(M) to a cone that commutes up to coherent homotopy in MM. However, in “simple” cases such as pullbacks, products, equalizers, sequential inverse limits, and so on, this is always true (and it will be true whenever the diagram category is a quiver). On the other hand, homotopy products in MM give actual (not weak) products in Ho(M)Ho(M), since there are no homotopies necessary.

References

  • Peter Freyd, Representations in abelian categories 1966 Proc. Conf. Categorical Algebra (La Jolla, Calif., 1965) pp. 95–120 Springer, New York

Last revised on November 26, 2024 at 04:16:23. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.