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\newtheorem{prop}{Proposition} \newtheorem{cor}{Corollary} \newtheorem*{utheorem}{Theorem} \newtheorem*{ulemma}{Lemma} \newtheorem*{uprop}{Proposition} \newtheorem*{ucor}{Corollary} \theoremstyle{definition} \newtheorem{defn}{Definition} \newtheorem{example}{Example} \newtheorem*{udefn}{Definition} \newtheorem*{uexample}{Example} \theoremstyle{remark} \newtheorem{remark}{Remark} \newtheorem{note}{Note} \newtheorem*{uremark}{Remark} \newtheorem*{unote}{Note} %------------------------------------------------------------------- \begin{document} %------------------------------------------------------------------- \section*{orbifold groupoid} \noindent\hyperlink{idea}{Idea}\dotfill \pageref*{idea} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{definitions}{Definitions}\dotfill \pageref*{definitions} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{relation_of_the_axioms}{Relation of the axioms}\dotfill \pageref*{relation_of_the_axioms} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{references}{References}\dotfill \pageref*{references} \linebreak \hypertarget{idea}{}\subsection*{{Idea}}\label{idea} A [[groupoid]] [[presented stack|presenting]] an [[orbifold]] (as a [[stack]]) is called an \textbf{orbifold groupoid} if it satisfies certain properties. Since in the literature there are different notions of orbifolds, there are different sets of properties the presenting groupoids are required to satisfy. The most common definition requires the presenting groupoid to be [[étale groupoid|étale]] and [[proper groupoid|proper]]. Note that these properties can be defined not only in smooth- or topological context. See for the moment [[open map]], the section on infinitesimal cohesion in [[cohesive (infinity,1)-topos]], and [[proper geometric morphism]]. \hypertarget{definitions}{}\subsection*{{Definitions}}\label{definitions} \begin{defn} \label{}\hypertarget{}{} (sse (smooth stable \'e{}tale) groupoid (\footnote{D. McDuff, groupoids, branched manifolds and multisections} ) An \textbf{sse groupoid} is a groupoid being \begin{itemize}% \item [[étale groupoid|étale]] \item [[stable groupoid|stable]] \item [[Lie groupoid|Lie]] \end{itemize} \end{defn} \begin{defn} \label{}\hypertarget{}{} (ep (\'e{}tale proper) groupoid )\footnote{D. McDuff, groupoids, branched manifolds and multisections} An \textbf{ep groupoid} is a groupoid being \begin{itemize}% \item [[étale groupoid|étale]] \item [[stable groupoid|stable]] \item [[Lie groupoid|Lie]] \item [[proper groupoid|proper]] \end{itemize} Since this is the most common choice of axioms a groupoid presenting an orbifold is meant to satisfy it is the default class of orbifold groupoids. Note that this definition is redundant since properness implies stability. Note that what \footnote{H. Hofer, polyfolds and a general Fredholm theory} calls `'ep-groupoid'` is `'\'e{}tale and proper'` but not Lie in the ordinary sense: Since the underlying category is that of sc-spaces, \'e{}tale becomes sc-\'e{}tale and also `'proper'` is understood in some modified sense. \end{defn} There is further terminology applicable to orbifold groupoids: \begin{defn} \label{}\hypertarget{}{} (\footnote{D. McDuff, groupoids, branched manifolds and multisections} ) Let $C$ be a groupoid, let $|C|=C_0/C_1$ denote its [[orbit space]]. $C$ is called \begin{itemize}% \item \textbf{nonsingular} if every $C(c,c)$ is trivial \item \textbf{effective} / \textbf{faithful} if for ever $c\in C_0$ and for every $f\in C(c,c)$ and for every neighborhood $f\in V\subset C_1$ of $f$ there is an $f^'\in V$ such that $s(f^')\not =t(f^')$ \item \textbf{(path)connected} if $|C|$ is (path)connected. \end{itemize} \end{defn} \begin{defn} \label{}\hypertarget{}{} (wnb (weighted nonsingular branched) groupoid )\footnote{D. McDuff, groupoids, branched manifolds and multisections} A \textbf{wnb (weighted nonsingular branched) groupoid} is a pair $(C,\Lambda)$ where $C$ is a oriented nonsingular sse Lie groupoid and $\Lambda:|C|_H\to (0,\infty)$ is a weighting function satisfying: For each $p\in |C|_H$ there is an open neighborhood $p\in N:=N(p)\subset |C|_H$ of $p$ and disjoint open subsets $U_1 ,...,U_j\subset \pi^{-1}_H(N)\subset C_0$ -called \textbf{local branches} and positive weights $m_1 ,...,m_j$ such that \begin{enumerate}% \item (covering) $\pi^{-1}_H(N)=|U_1|\cup ...\cup |U_j|\subset |C|$ \item (local regularity) all projections $\pi_H:U_i\to |U_i|_H$ is a homeomorphism onto a relatively closed subset of $N$. \item (weighting) $\Lambda(q)=\Sigma_{i:q\in |U_i|_H}m_i$ for all $q\in N$ \end{enumerate} where $|C|_H$ denotes the maximal Hausdorff quotient of $|C|$ (If $C$ is proper we have $|C|=|C|_H$ and $\pi_H:C_0\to |C|_H$ the canonical projection. Points $p\in |C|_H$ having more than one inverse image are called \textbf{branch points}. The tuple $(N,U_i,m_i)=(N^p,U^p_i,m^p_i)$ is called a \textbf{local branching structure at} $p$. $C$ is called \textbf{compact} if $|C|_H$ is. Note that here the properness axiom is relaxed. \end{defn} \hypertarget{relation_of_the_axioms}{}\paragraph*{{Relation of the axioms}}\label{relation_of_the_axioms} Given an ep groupoid, the properness axiom implies that the orbit space of the orbifold groupoid is Hausdorff. Properness implies stability. \hypertarget{references}{}\subsection*{{References}}\label{references} category: Lie theory [[!redirects orbifold groupoids]] [[!redirects orbifold groupoid]] \end{document}