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    • CommentRowNumber1.
    • CommentAuthorDavidRoberts
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010
    • (edited Apr 8th 2010 by Mathforge Admin)

    Discussion continued from here.

    Incidentally, Domenico, if we have a span (this is conjectural) \mathcal{P}_1(X) \leftarrow [\Delta^1,X] \to Bord_1(X) where the left leg is the localisation at all arrows and the right arrow is the canonical one to the free symmetric monoidal category, then this is very cool, since the universal property of the localisation means we can go from functors \mathcal{P}_1(X) to functors Bord_1(X) without too much trouble. All this needs checking, but puts our remarks on the other thread on a more solid footing.

    • CommentRowNumber2.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010
    • (edited Apr 8th 2010)
    fine. so we can state our current problem as follows: let ; then we have a natural functor . since the target is a groupoid, this factors through a morphism , and we are wondering whether this is an equivalence.

    second problem: assume we are ok with the extension prolem; then a linear representation of is a vector bundle with a connection on (and we can decide to consider -connections here, but let us leave this for later). pushing this forward along produces a 1-dimensional TQFT. according to Quantization as a Kan Extension this push-forward should be a Kan extension. in paticular, at the level of objects one should have the global sections of the original bundle (note that this is the push-forward to a point of the sheaf of sections of the original bundle), and morphisms should be given by path integrals (what about taking this as a definition of the path integral?)
    • CommentRowNumber3.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010
    • (edited Apr 8th 2010)

    (what about taking this as a definition of the path integral?)

    When we did the Kantization thing, there were still puzzling open questions.

    I think now I have a refined idea of how the push-forward should work:

    as you know, the full picture for the differential cocycles is actually not quite functors from paths to somewhere,, but twisted cocycles in the homotopy fibers of

     \mathbf{H}(X,A) \to \mathbf{H}(X, \mathbf{B}A_{dR})

    (in the case that A is a group object).

    Here on the left we have the plain underlying cocycles of the bundles  X \to A and on the right we have their curvature, which is a functor on paths:  \mathbf{\Pi}(X) \to \mathbf{B}A such that the underlying \mathbf{B}A-cocycle X \to \mathbf{\Pi}(X) \to \mathbf{B}A is trivial.

    Given this description, it is clear what the right push-forward should be: you push-forward both \mathbf{H}(X,A) and \mathbf{H}(X, \mathbf{B}A_{dR}) and this then induces a morphism between their homotopy fiber. That should be the push-forward on differential cohomology that we are after.

    So first of all, this gives manifestly the right answer on the underlying bundles, because we push the underlying bundle cocycle by itself. So a vector bundle will be sent to its space of sections, when pushed to the point as a cocycle for A the K-theory coefficient, by standard lore.

    Similarly, the push-forward of the curvature bit should be clear, this must be just the fiber integration of the curvatures. For vector bundles in K-theory again, I think this should give the fiber integration of the Chern-character, as usually considered.

    And then the push-forward on the differential cocycle itself is induced from this.

    I haven't fully penetrated this story, but this looks right. I think it provides a missing aspect from the original Kan-tization ansatz. There the transport functors directly were pushed, not taking into account that they need to be understood as cocycles in twisted cohomology, sitting in the homotopy fiber of two other cohomology theories.

    So I think this explains why the results mentiones at Kantization exhibit an unexpectedly overstrictified behaviour, it's because some additional degree of freedom in the problem wasn't taken care of. So the source of the puzzlement is really the same as that of the original "fake-flatness" puzzlement: it comes from not being serious about the fact that differential cohomology is not a plain cohomology, but a twisted cohomology theory.

    • CommentRowNumber4.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010
    • (edited Apr 8th 2010)

    If the God's of math would grant me one wish, it would be to have enough knowledge to understand what you just said.

    My gut tells me (and has told me since you first started saying it) this is important.

    • CommentRowNumber5.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010
    • (edited Apr 8th 2010)
    it seems the God of math decided to disrupt our understanding of gauge fields by confusing our languages.. a quite old trick, it has to be said.. :-)

    (or it is just me who is not able anymore to read math formulas in the forum?)
    • CommentRowNumber6.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010

    :D

    • CommentRowNumber7.
    • CommentAuthorAndrew Stacey
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010

    Looks alright to me :P

    (Okay, mea culpa. I forgot to recreate the cache so the latex plugin broke. Fixed now, I hope.)

    • CommentRowNumber8.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010

    @Andrew: You rock :) Thanks

  1. @Urs: so, if I'm following what you wrote, you're saying: the background field is an element in twisted cohomology, i.e. in the homotopy fibre of two cohomologies for the space . pushing both these cohomologies forward along we obtain a big commutative diagram and so a map between homotopy fibres. this map you are suggesting is the path integral, taking values into the twisted cohomology of the point.

    I think I agree with this, but I'd like to spend another couple of days with the basic paths in differential manifolds/bundles with connections picture to fix my ideas in teh concrete situation, first.
    • CommentRowNumber10.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 8th 2010
    • (edited Apr 8th 2010)

    if I'm following what you wrote, you're saying: the background field is an element in twisted cohomology, i.e. in the homotopy fibre of two cohomologies for the space . pushing both these cohomologies forward along we obtain a big commutative diagram and so a map between homotopy fibres. this map you are suggesting is the path integral, taking values into the twisted cohomology of the point.

    Yes! Exactly.

    but I'd like to spend another couple of days with the basic paths in differential manifolds/bundles with connections picture to fix my ideas in teh concrete situation, first.

    Sure. As I said, I need to work out for myself more details of this picture. What I said was just a reply to your suggestion that the path integral might be defined as the push-forward of functors on paths. I just wanted to point out that this does not seem to be the general definition. Even though the general definition does involve this as an ingredient and as a special case.

    • CommentRowNumber11.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2010
    • (edited Apr 9th 2010)

    thinking to the special case, I've done a step backwards: from 1-paths to 0-paths. so I have a smooth manifold X and I want to define a "functor" X\to Vect. looking at X as to a category with only identities, this amonts to giving a vector space E_x for any point x of X. so a way to make the smooth structure come into play is to define a "smooth functor" from X to Vect to be a smooth vector bundle E on X. next, I want to push forward to a point. so I want to resume all the spaces E_x into a single one. forgetting about the smooth structure one has an obvious answer: take the direct product \prod_{x\in X}E_x. but this is nothng but the set of sections of the projecton \coprod_{x\in X}E_x\to X, so one can make the smooth structure come in by thinking of sections of E\to X as a "smooth direct product". this is in a sense obvious, but I must admit I had never thought to sections this way before. I'd like to say this more precisely, and here is where -I suspect- differential cohomology comes in: the formal way of saying "smooth functor" is saying "a cocycle in \mathbf{H}(X,\mathbf{B}GL), for some suitable smooth topos \mathbf{H}. and the "smooth direct product" is the image of this cocycle along the pushforward to the point. this pushforward, however, I must admit I don't clearly see it, so for a while I'll keep writing in terms of the naive idea of smooth functors, smooth direct products, etc.

    • CommentRowNumber12.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2010
    • (edited Apr 9th 2010)

    Domenico,

    yes, the fact that forming the space of sections of a vctor bundle over a discrete set is nothing but taking thr direct sum of its fibers, is what was in Freed's old article on quantizatioin and higher structures part of the motivation for him to suggest that the path integral is just the top dimension piece of a more general "categorical summing operation" that expressess quantization: the space of section assigned in codimension one is itself something like a "codimension-1-path integral", namely a sum over points.

    Ever since, the question has been how exactly to find from this observation the precise and fully generally working definition. That's of course what we are talking about here.

    By the way, I don't see any displayed math in your latest comment. But it does display in the commentsfurther above. Maybe we need to ask Andrew for help again.

    In any case, let me just see if I have understood correctly the question that you want to be looking at now: you want to consider the stack (on CartSp, I would suggest) of vector bundles -- Vect -- and then a manifold X and think of a vector bundle on X as a morphism of stacks  X \to Vect . Then you want to see in which sense this pushes forward to a morphism  * \to Vect from the terminal stack on CartSp to vect, i.e. to a vector space.

    • CommentRowNumber13.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2010

    If so, I think then for instance the left Kan extension in the 2-category of stacks on CartSp of  X \to Vect along  X \to * does seem to me to yield the vector space of smooth sections of the vector bundle on X.

    • CommentRowNumber14.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2010
    • (edited Apr 9th 2010)

    By the way, I don't see any displayed math in your latest comment.

    that was since at first I formatted the content as html (so neither I could see maths); then I reformatted it as markdown and now it should work (at least, I see maths now).

    let me see if I understand what you're telling me: the naive idea of a vector bundle as a smooth functor from a manifold X to Vect is (almost tautologically) encoded in looking both X and Vect as stacks over cartesian spaces: Bun(X)=Hom_{Sh_{\leq 1}(CartSp)}(X,Vect), where \leq 1 refers to the fact that we are considering 1-stacks and not arbitrary oo-stacks. in particular, since Sh_{\leq 1}(CartSp) is a 2-category, Bun(X) is a category, and one recovers the classical notion of morphisms of bundles.

    now, given a bundle E\colon X \to Vect and a morphism of smooth manifolds f\colon X \to Y we can wonder about the Kan extension of E along f, and this we suspect is somethink like fibrewise smooth global sections.

    • CommentRowNumber15.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2010

    Yes.But not “fiberwise smooth sections”. (What does that mean?) But smooth sections.

    Here is the proof: let X*X \to * be the terminal morphism to the terminal stack on CartSpCartSp (the presheaf that assigns the one-object category everywhere).

    Let E:XVectE : X \to Vect be the morphism of stacks on CartSpCartSp classifying some smooth vector bundle on XX. Let Γ(E):*Vect \Gamma(E) : * \to Vect be its vector space of smooth sections, regarded as a vector bundle over the point.

    We need to show that for every other vector space V:*VectV : * \to Vect , morphisms (i.e. 2-morphisms) from X*VVectX \to * \stackrel{V}{\to} Vect to E:XVect E : X \to Vect are in bijection with morphisms from V:*VectV : * \to Vect to Γ(V):*Vect\Gamma(V) : * \to Vect.

    It is sufficient to test this for V=kV = k the ground field. (Right?) For that case, manifestly both these sets of transformations are the set of smooth sections of EE.

    (for this to work we need to regard VectVect as category-valued stack of course. So this here takes place in a (2,2)(2,2)-topos as opposed to a (2,1)(2,1)-topos. )

  2. Yes.But not "fiberwise smooth sections". (What does that mean?)

    that referred to the case of a general morphism f:X\to Y; so my conjectural naive answer was, in that case, that over the point y\in Y one has the vector space \Gamma(f^{-1}(y); \iota_y^*E), where \iota_y:f^{-1}(y)\to X is the inclusion. actually it's likely one should work with homotopy fibres rather tahn with fibres, but let us concentrate on the case Y=* for now.

    now I'll go into the details of your proof here above.

    • CommentRowNumber17.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2010
    • (edited Apr 9th 2010)

    (Right?)

    Right: the stack morphism X*VVectX \to * \stackrel{V}{\to} Vect is represented by the trivial bundle X×VXX\times V\to X, and this is a direct sum of trivial bundles k×XXk\times X\to X.

    It seems I’ve finally learnt what global sections of a bundle really are :-)

  3. so let us take the next step and go from X to Paths_1(X). the naive picture is that given a smooth manifold X, a smmoth functor P_1(X)\to Vect is the datum of a vector bundle on X endowed with a connection. how can we formalize this? an obvious answer seems to look again at stacks on cartesian spaces: given X, one considers the internal path category of X (basically we have so far been discussing it in the path-groupoid version), and stack morphisms Paths_1(X)\to Vect. if now we want to push this forward to the point, what we should get is again the space of smooth sections of the bundle, seen as a vector bundle over the point (and so, clearly, with the trivial connection). things become nastier if we want to go from Paths_1(X) to Bord_1(X). indeed, even in the vector bundle one is considering is finite dimensional, pushing it forwrward to a point one gets an infinite dimensional vector space and so a non fully dualizable object. this obstructs the extension along Bord_1(X)\to Bord_1(*) at least in a naive way. moving from paths to "measured paths", i.e., paths with a length, seems to be a solution, but I have to think more to this.

    quite obviously, next step would be considering Bord_2, and there for some reason I don't see yet, the right thing to do will be considering "surfaces with a conformal structure". anyway, it would qui quite senseless to represent Bord_2 (which is a 2-category) in Vect which is a 1-category, and 2-Vect seems a more suitable target.

    strings here we come :-)

    • CommentRowNumber19.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 9th 2010
    • (edited Apr 9th 2010)

    Domenico, I’ll reply directly to your last two comments later. Right now I would like to state some thoughts on the general abstract definition of “push-forward in cohomology” in the style of the intrinsic notion of cohomology of an oo-topos.

    The following is supported by a handful of plausibility considerations, but might still be lacking some crucial insight, I am not sure.


    Fiber-integration of cocycles

    Let H\mathbf{H} be an (,n)(\infty,n)-topos.

    For FEΣF \to E \to \Sigma a fibration sequence (for every choice of base point of Σ\Sigma) and for ω:EA\omega : E \to A an AA-valued cocycle on EE, the fiber integration of ω\omega over EE is, if it exists, a cocycle E/Σω:Σ[F,A]\int_{E/\Sigma} \omega : \Sigma \to [F,A] on the base Σ\Sigma; with coefficients in the internal hom-object [F,A][F,A].

    Without further extra structure, this exists canonically for E=Σ×FE = \Sigma \times F the trivial FF-bundle over Σ\Sigma. In this case consider the adjunct or:Σ[F,E]or : \Sigma \to [F,E] of Id:[Σ×F,E]Id : [\Sigma \times F, E]. Then the fiber integrated cocycle is the composite

    E/Σω:=or *[F,ω]:Σor[F,E][F,ω][F,A] \int_{E/\Sigma} \omega := or^* [F,\omega] : \Sigma \stackrel{or}{\to} [F,E] \stackrel{[F,\omega]}{\to} [F,A]

    of this adjunct with the transgression [F,ω]:[F,E][F,A][F,\omega] : [F,E] \to [F,A] of the coycle ω\omega to the mapping space object.

    Notice that the precomposition operation or *or^* produces the cocycle on Σ\Sigma which, roughly speaking, sends a point of Σ\Sigma to the integration of the cocycle ω\omega on the fiber FF over this point.

    The above construction only depends on the existence of any morphism Σ×FE\Sigma \times F \to E, it need not be the identity Σ×FE\Sigma \times F \to E. Call such a choice

    or:F×BE or : F \times B \to E

    an FF-orientation of EE. Then with respect to that we have fiber integration of cocycles as above.

    • CommentRowNumber20.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 10th 2010
    • (edited Apr 10th 2010)

    apparently I’m missing something: for the trivial fibration sequence EE*E\to E\to *, it seems to me that E/*ω\int_{E/*}\omega is ω\omega seen as a point in [E,A][E,A], and at the moment I’m unable to work out ho this reproduces the toy example of an nn-form which integrated on an nn-manifold gives a number (a 0-form on the point). there’s something crucial I must be missing :-(

    • CommentRowNumber21.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 10th 2010

    The basic example to keep in mind is that where E=Π(S n)E = \Pi(S^n) and A=B nA = \mathbf{B}^n \mathbb{R}. Then the cocycle EAE \to A is a closed nn-form on the sphere. And [Π(S n),B nU(1)][\Pi(S^n), \mathbf{B}^n U(1)] is equivalent to the nn-fold delooping of B\mathbf{B}\mathbb{R}, which is \simeq \mathbb{R}. So in this case the procedure I indicated is supposed to produce the “integration without integration” of the nn-fom over the nn-sphere.

    One important point here is that this fiber integration procedure takes care of the shift in degree in cohomology. In the ordinary case, the push-forward of a degree nn-class along a map EΣE \to \Sigma with dd-dimensional fibers is supposed to produce a cocycle of degree ndn-d. Usually this is expresed by taking the original cocycle ω\omega and sending it to the thing that evaluates on the cup product with the fundamental cycle of the fibers ω=ω(F())\int \omega = \omega(F \smile (-) ) or something like this.

    My abstract-nonsense formula above is an attempt to see what the very general mechanism behind this procedure in the context of intrinsic cohomoloy the way we discuss it here should be. But as I said, I am not fully convinced myself yet that I entirely understand this. But the above hopefully gives some indication now.

    • CommentRowNumber22.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 10th 2010

    Domenico,

    to further further expand: the basic example of fiber integration to be modeled here is that in Deligne cohomology. This is what originally my notes on transgression and “integration without integration” were getting at. A less genera-abstract-nonsense approach based however on the same intuitive idea was developed by Baer et al. A brief review of this is here in Baer on fiber integration and Cheeger-Simons characters. Notice that the main point there is effectively to take the fiber integrated cocycle ω\omega to be ω(F())\omega(F \cup (-)), although the formulas there look more complicated and hide this simple idea a bit.

  4. coming back to (extended) TQFTs, I’ve thought to what one earns when upgrades from paths to measured paths: a measured path can be split in two. to be more precise, let Paths 1 l(x,y)Paths_1^l(x,y) be the set of lenght ll paths from xx to yy, and let l 1l_1 and l 2l_2 be such l=l 1+l 2l=l_1+l_2. then composition of paths induces an isomorphism of sets

    zXPaths 1 l 1(x,z)×Paths 1 l 2(z,y)Paths 1 l(x,y) \coprod_{z\in X}Paths_1^{l_1}(x,z)\times Paths_1^{l_2}(z,y)\to Paths_1^l(x,y)

    so, if (E,):Paths 1(X)Vect(E,\nabla)\colon Paths_1(X)\to Vect is any representation (i.e., (E,)(E,\nabla) is a vector bundle with a connection on XX), if one sets

    K l(x,y)= Paths 1 l(x,y)Hol (γ)dγ K^l(x,y)=\int_{Paths_1^l(x,y)}Hol_\nabla(\gamma) d\gamma

    (whichever meaning one is able to give to this integral), then one gets

    K l(x,y)= XK l 2(z,y)K l 1(x,z)dz K^l(x,y)=\int_X K^{l_2}(z,y)K^{l_1}(x,z) dz

    so, if one thinks of K l(x,y)K^l(x,y) at the “matrix element of position (x,y)(x,y)” for an endomorphism T(l)T(l) of Prod xXE x\Prod_{x\in X}E_x, one obtains the semigroup law T(l 1)T(l 2)=T(l)T(l_1)T(l_2)=T(l). we have already remarked that in the smooth setting, the “smooth direct product” is the space Γ(E)\Gamma(E) of global sections, so all the informal nonsense above seems to lead to the following idea: pushing forward a linear representation of euclidean 1-bordism along X*X\to * produces a 1-dimensional euclidean QFT with Z(*)=Γ(E)Z(*)=\Gamma(E). so, if one can see by other means that such a push-forward exists, then one can use it as a definition of the above path integrals.

    (more on this tomorrow)

    • CommentRowNumber24.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010
    • (edited Apr 11th 2010)

    a few other thoughts on the naive picture. when euclidean paths are considered, connected closed 1-cobordisms (i.e., copies of S 1S^1 with a lenght) have a very simple moduli space: the half-line (0,+)(0,+\infty). evaluating the 1-dimensional euclidean QFT on connected closed manifolds, therefore produces a function on this moduli space. this can be seen as a section ZZ of a (trivial) line bundle on (0,+)(0,+\infty).

    something similar happens for 2-dimensional conformal cobordism. in that case the topology of closed surfaces is completely encoded in their genus, and for each genus gg there is a (non topologically trivial) moduli space g\mathcal{M}_g (this should better seen as a stack, but let us be extremely naive for now). the straightforward adaptation of the 1-dimensional argument to this case would suggest that one ends up with a funcuion ZZ on moduli spaces, but actually by the phenomenon of so-called conformal anomay one ensd up with a ZZ which is a section of a nontrivial line bundle.

    what I’m convinced of, but this is still extremely foggy in my mind, is that from the right perspective this phenomenon should be not anomalous at all, and that the surprising fact should have been ending with a trivial line bundle. this perspective should involve a categorization of enriched cobordisms. for instance, in the euclidean case we have only one kind of isomorphism between Riemannian manifolds, namely diffeomorphisms mapping one metric to another by pullback. in other words, morhisms are the same as in the topological case, and preserving the metric is a constrain. in the conformal case, instead, we have a whole new bunch of isomorphsms, given by conformal transformations of the metrics. so, on the one hand, one should have the diffeomorphisms stuff which is the analougue of the topological case and so would allow mimicing everything and end up with a trivial line bundle; but then there is the conformal transformation action and its subtle interplay with diffeomorphisms to make the line bundle non-trivial. as I said, extremely foggy, but I’m convinced that when well categorized this will say that what one should expect to come out with starting with a linear representation of ConfCob 2(X)ConfCob_2(X) is a section of a nontrivial line bundle on g\mathcal{M}_g. I mean, from the right perspective this should be the natural aswer, and not a mysterious byproduct of the particular technique chosen to give a meaning to the path-integral as it is usually find in string theory textbooks.

    • CommentRowNumber25.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010
    • (edited Apr 11th 2010)

    Domenico,

    concerning these parameterized paths, I have come to think that the following is a good picture:

    let Σ=\Sigma = \mathbb{R} be the “parameter space” for the particle, and let XX be target space. Then we can consider the diagram

    P 1(X)×P 1(Σ) Vect P 1(Σ) \array{ P_1(X) \times P_1(\Sigma) &\to& Vect \\ \downarrow \\ P_1(\Sigma) }

    where the horizontal morphism encodes the action. Notice that since morphisms in P 1(Σ)P_1(\Sigma) are fully determined by their source and target, these serve to measure lenght: a morphism in P 1(X)×P 1(Σ)P_1(X) \times P_1(\Sigma) is a path in XX with a length l l \in \mathbb{R} (and with a “time” associated to its source).

    So here the action P 1(X)×P 1(Σ)VectP_1(X) \times P_1(\Sigma) \to Vect may have various components. Notably it may have a gauge interaction part

    P 1(X)×P 1(Σ)P 1(X)(E,)Vect P_1(X) \times P_1(\Sigma) \to P_1(X) \stackrel{(E,\nabla)}{\to} Vect

    coming from a vector bundle with connection, but it may also have a kinetic part, which sends a path γ:IX\gamma : I \to X of length ll to the morphism exp(12 s 0 s 1|γ| 2) \mathbb{R} \stackrel{\exp(-\frac{1}{2}\int_{s_0}^{s_1} |\gamma'|^2)}{\to} \mathbb{R} (tensored with the gauge interaction part above).

    If we regard P 1(Σ)P_1(\Sigma) as a groupoid, then we would have to “Wick rotate” this by adding an imaginary unit in the exponent, but we can also regard P 1(Σ)P_1(\Sigma) as paths in \mathbb{R} regarded as a Lorentzian space, then its morphisms would be futute directed paths and not invertible, as described in one of the section at Lorentzian manifold. In this latter case XX would really be spacetime, not just space, and we would add a square root in the exponent and end up with the action for the Klein-Gordon particle.

    We have the canonical point *Vect* \to Vect and can form the lax pullback of that along the action, to obtain a diagram

    At * P 1(X)×P 1(Σ) Vect P 1(Σ) \array{ At &\to& * \\ \downarrow && \downarrow \\ P_1(X) \times P_1(\Sigma) &\to& Vect \\ \downarrow \\ P_1(\Sigma) }

    This AtAt is the groupoid that is described at “exercise in groupoidification – the path integral” (it is roughly – but not exactly – something like an Atiyah-groupoid, therefore my symbols). Its objects are vectors in fibers of EE and its morphisms are path in XX with length, that go from one vector in one fiber to the corresponding result of parallel transport/kinetic action of that vector along the path to another vector in another fiber.

    Think of an \infty-groupoid under \infty-groupoid cardinality as a rational number. An \infty-groupoid over a fiber of AtAt is a collection of rational numbers over elements of the vectors in the typical fiber of EE- By multiplying and adding this all up in EE this defines a vector in EE. So an \infty-groupoid over the space of objects of AtAt decategorifies to a section of EE, a wave function. Pull-pushing this \infty-groupoid over the space of morphisms of AtAt is precisely the path integral, as described at “exercise in groupoidification”.

    • CommentRowNumber26.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010
    • (edited Apr 11th 2010)

    rather than P 1(X)×P 1()P_1(X)\times P_1(\mathbb{R}), I would consider a P˜ 1(X)\tilde{P}_1(X) whose 1-morphisms are pairs (φ,g)(\varphi,g), where φ\varphi is a map from a 1-manifold to XX, and gg is a Riemannian metric on that 1-manifold (this is clearly reminiscent of Polyakov way of looking at string actions). then one would have a diagram

    P˜ 1(X) P 1(X) \array{ &&\tilde{P}_1(X)& & \\ &\swarrow&&\searrow& \\ P_1(X)&&&&\mathcal{M} }

    where \mathcal{M} is the moduli space of Riemannian 1-manifolds (i.e., the datum of topological type and lenghts). this is almost the same thing as P 1()P_1(\mathbb{R}), so I guess I can verbatim follow your argument to end up with a diagram like

    At * P˜ 1(X) Vect \array{ At &\to& * \\ \downarrow && \downarrow \\ \tilde{P}_1(X) &\to& Vect \\ \downarrow \\ \mathcal{M} }

    which is of the shape I was seeking. I guess “an exercise in groupoidification – the path integral” refers to the nCafe’ entry and not to the NLab one, right? is there a cleaned up version of that? (otherwise i can clean it up or the Lab, I can’t imagine a better way to learn things contained there). a final question: by the canonical *Vect*\to Vect you mean the morphism picking up the base field?

    • CommentRowNumber27.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010

    I guess “an exercise in groupoidification – the path integral” refers to the nCafe’ entry and not to the NLab one, right? is there a cleaned up version of that? (otherwise i can clean it up or the Lab, I can’t imagine a better way to learn things contained there).

    I am right now in the process of cleaning up the nLab entry exercise in groupoidification - the path integral. Right now it is however back in birth state. You can see the history links to get the previous version, of course.

    a final question: by the canonical *Vect* \to Vect you mean the morphism picking up the base field?

    Yes.

    • CommentRowNumber28.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010

    rather than P 1(X)×P 1()P_1(X)\times P_1(\mathbb{R}), I would consider a P˜ 1(X)\tilde{P}_1(X) whose 1-morphisms are pairs (φ,g)(\varphi,g), where φ\varphi is a map from a 1-manifold to XX, and gg is a Riemannian metric on that 1-manifold (this is clearly reminiscent of Polyakov way of looking at string actions).

    We can do that. For the present purpose this is equivalent to what I porposed, because you can think of a path γ Σ:[0,1]Σ\gamma_\Sigma : [0,1] \to \Sigma to the (pseudo)Riemannian manifold Σ\Sigma as providing via pullbacl of the metric on Σ\Sigma a metric on [0,1][0,1].

    I am thinking that for further developments thinking of P 1(X)×P 1(Σ)P_1(X) \times P_1(\Sigma) will be more beneficial. But maybe I am wrong. And for the time being it does not matter much. So for the purpose of the discussion we can think of either definition.

    • CommentRowNumber29.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010

    By the way:

    One indication hat Π(X×Σ)\mathbf{\Pi(X \times \Sigma)} should be considered is the material at multisymplectic geometry.

    • CommentRowNumber30.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010
    • (edited Apr 11th 2010)

    you can think of a path $\gamma_\Sigma : [0,1] \to \Sigma$ to the (pseudo)Riemannian manifold $\Sigma$ as providing via pullback of the metric on $\Sigma$ a metric on $[0,1]$.

    Sure, and in string parlance this would be a Nambu-Goto point of view. this is classically equivalent to the Polyakov point of view which adds a metric on the source as an independent field, but since this second point of view seems to be more fruitful when computing string path integrals, I would adopt it from the beginning. anyway, since at this level the two approaches can be considered equivalent, I agree: let us think of either definition.

    • CommentRowNumber31.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010

    you can think of a path γ Σ:[0,1]Σ\gamma_\Sigma : [0,1] \to \Sigma to the (pseudo)Riemannian manifold Σ\Sigma as providing via pullback of the metric on Σ\Sigma a metric on [0,1][0,1].

    Sure, and in string parlance this would be a Nambu-Goto point of view.

    Not quite. For the Nambu-Goto point of view I would pull back the metric from XX. Here I am pulling it back from Σ\Sigma, which already is the worldsheet!

    I think rather what I am getting at there is a distinction not usually made: that between parameter space and paths in parameter space.

    My motivation here is to get to the setup in my AQFT paper: i know that a parallel transport on the path (n,1)-category of a Lorentzian worldvolume Σ\Sigma induces a local net of observables, hence an AQFT on Σ\Sigma. That is similar to a factorization algebra on Σ\Sigma, which is known to be related to cobordism reps by topological chiral homology, at least in the topological and Euclidean case. But here I find it interesting to really deal with the physical/non-topological and Lorentzian case. So I want a quantization prescription that sends a differential cocycle on target space to one on paramater space Σ\Sigma.

    Anyway, i have continued working on exercise in groupoidification - the path integral a bit more. This is not yet in the form of a good exposition. But you will be able to follow it.

    • CommentRowNumber32.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 11th 2010
    • (edited Apr 11th 2010)

    a remark on the definition of the AtAt groupoid in #25.

    given a group GG, a set XX endowed with a GG-action is the same thing as a functor BGSet\mathbf{B}G\to Set. building the action groupoid X//GX//G can therefore be seen as a map Hom(BG,Set)GrpdHom(\mathbf{B}G,Set)\Grpd. exactly the same thing happens for AtAt: one starts with a representation P 1(X)VectP_1(X)\to Vect and ends up with a groupoid AtAt. and the analogue of the fibration sequence XX//GBGX\to X//G \to \mathbf{B}G is the square

    E At P 0(X) P 1(X) \array{ E &\to& At \\ \downarrow && \downarrow \\ P_0(X) &\to& P_1(X) }

    where EE is the vector bundle defined by P 1(X)VectP_1(X)\to Vect (forgetting the datum of the connection).

    edit: ok, I see this is already discussed at the nCafe’ exercise in groupidification. I’ll wait I finish reading that before coming back here.

    • CommentRowNumber33.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    seen as a map Hom(BG,Set)GrpdHom(BG,Set)Grpd

    Sorry, could you say that piece again? This is probably a typo, I guess. I am not 100% sure how it should be read.

    • CommentRowNumber34.
    • CommentAuthorDavidRoberts
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    The map (presumably a functor) is the assignment (\rho:BG \to Set) \mapsto \rho(*)//G \in Gpd. This functor could be lifted to Gpd/BG, if desired, and it probably should be.

    • CommentRowNumber35.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    that should have been Hom(BG,Set)GrpdHom(\mathbf{B}G,Set)\to\Grpd, there was a missing arrow :)

    • CommentRowNumber36.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    Oh, I see. That functor is called the hocolim, by the way! The action groupoid is the oo-colimit over the action functor.

    • CommentRowNumber37.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    I’m on the nCafe’ blog entry now. the first post ends with

    So the “total” space of in *{}\int in^*\{\bullet\} over yXy\in X is the VV-colored set γ:xy{ (γ)v}\cup_{\gamma:x\to y}\{\bullet_{\nabla(\gamma)v}\}, where I write v\bullet_v for an element colored by vv. If VV has an additive structure, for instance if it is a vector space, we have the cardinality operation on VV-colored sets ||:Set VV|\cdot|:Set_V\to V and get that the cardinality of the above is γ:xy(γ)v\sum_{\gamma:x\to y}\nabla(\gamma)v. But that’s the right path integral kernel for propagation from xx to yy acting on the state vv over xx.

    I totally agree, but maybe instead of VV-colored sets, I would first talk of sections of bundles. more precisely, let us denote by V xV_x and V yV_y the copies of VV sitting over xx and yy respectively. then the total space of in *{}\int in^*\{\bullet\} over yXy\in X can equivalently be seen as the constant section vv of the trivial V xV_x-bundle over Paths(x,y)={γ:xy}Paths(x,y)=\{\gamma:x\to y\}, or as the (“nonconstant”) section (γ)v\nabla(\gamma)v of the trivial V yV_y-bundle over Paths(x,y)Paths(x,y). then, precisely since the bundle we are considering is trivial, a section of its is just a function Paths(x,y)V yPaths(x,y)\to V_y, and so a V yV_y-colored set. The “measure” of this V yV_y-colored set is γ:xy(γ)v\int_{\gamma:x\to y}\nabla(\gamma)v, i.e. the above written sum in the discrete case.

    • CommentRowNumber38.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    just to see if I’m following the span of groupoids idea: if f:ABf:A\to B is a morphism of groupoids, then I have both simple and natural pullbacks f *:Grpd/BGrpd/Af^*:Grpd/B\to Grpd/A and pushforwards f *:Grpd/AGrpd/Bf_*:Grpd/A\to Grpd/B. the first is defined by f *(BB):=B× BAAf^*(B'\to B):=B'\times_B A\to A; the second is just the composition f *(AA):=(AAfB)f_*(A'\to A):= (A'\to A\stackrel{f}{\to}B).

    so, in particular, given a span of groupoids AfCgBA\stackrel{f}{\leftarrow}C\stackrel{g}{\to}B, we have a push-pull g *f *:Grpd/AGrpd/Bg_*f^*:Grpd/A\to Grpd/B.

    is this correct?

    • CommentRowNumber39.
    • CommentAuthorDavidRoberts
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    @Domenico

    Yep!

    • CommentRowNumber40.
    • CommentAuthorzskoda
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    A general remark I always like to emphasise: the pushforward in the span/correspondence tricks whenever things have problems with size is the proper pushfoward f !f_! rather then the usual pushfoward f *f_* in all geometric situations I know of. This is related to the ability to integrate (“integral transform”, “cardinality”) what you can do only if you correctly control compactness by teh appropriate version of properness. Of course, the rarely used alternative to use the non-proper pushfoward but then to restrict the attention to the sheaves which behaves well with respect to it, as if the map/pushforward were proper, i.e. to work with proper sheaves/objects only.

    • CommentRowNumber41.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    Domenico writes:

    I totally agree, but maybe instead of V-colored sets, I would first talk of sections of bundles.

    I think I see what you mean, but does this generalize well to the case where we do not start the pull-push with a “delta-state” but with a general state?

    The most general picture is that we pull-push any “geometric oo-functions” along the span. Overcategories of sets of groupoids or oo-groupoids are just the simplest example of that. Maybe it is evenn good to apply the oo-Grothendieck construciton and think equivalently not of oo-groupoids over the spaces of fields being pull-pushed, but oo-sheaves on these spaces o fields. I am not sure yet if I have found the most elegant perspective here.

    just to see if I’m following the span of groupoids idea: if f:A→B is a morphism of groupoids, then I have both simple and natural pullbacks

    Yes. More generally speaking, we make use of the fact that forming overcategories is a geometric function object as discussed there in more detail.

    Zoran writes:

    A general remark I always like to emphasise: the pushforward in the span/correspondence tricks whenever things have problems with size

    Yes, that’s a good comment. Generally one might amplify the “size” issues here (which are about finite versus infinite,not set versus class here): in what we are dewscribing, all the subtlety with the non-well-definedness of the path integral is pushed into a decategorification step, that which takes cardinalities of oo-groupoids over VV. If this step is postponed ad infinitum then the problem that the path integral does not produce a well defined number never appears.

    There are different conclusions one might eventually draw from this, of course, but for the time being it is useful to just notice this fact.

  5. so, I’ve been thinking to “paths with absolute time”, i.e. what in Urs picture is P 1(X)×P 1()=P 1(X×)P_1(X)\times P_1(\mathbb{R})=P_1(X\times \mathbb{R}). if I’m right in interpreting it, the idea is that objects are pairs (x,t 1)(x,t_1), where xx is a point of XX at time t 1t_1 and morphisms (x,t 1)(y,t 2)(x,t_1) \to (y,t_2) are paths γ:[t 1,t 2]X\gamma:[t_1,t_2]\to X such that γ(t 1)=x\gamma(t_1)=x and γ(t 2)=y\gamma(t_2)=y. this way one is able to “break a path at intermediate times” and to obtain the 1-parameter group tZ(t)t\mapsto Z(t) discussed in #23.

    I’m wondering whether this X×X\times \mathbb{R} is nothing but a simplified version of a spacetime manifold YY, in which one has “factored out” the time component. then one is parametrizing worldlines using absolute tiem as a parameter. is it so?

    • CommentRowNumber43.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    if I’m right in interpreting it

    yes.

    I’m wondering whether this X×X\times \mathbb{R} is nothing but a simplified version of a spacetime manifold YY, in which one has “factored out” the time component.

    No, we want to think of XX as being Lorentzian spacetime. Rather, X×X \times \mathbb{R} here and generally X×ΣX \times \Sigma is the extended configuration space as discussed in multisymplectic geometry. This is really an important motivation for considering it. Please have a look at the entry on multisymplectic geometry.

    • CommentRowNumber44.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    The shift to Lorentzian spacetime makes me happy. That was one of the things that bugged me about the original “Kantization”. I asked at An Exercise in Kantization:

    Eric: “Let X˜\tilde{X} be the groupoid which has as objects pairs (x,s)(x,s), where xMx\in M and sRs\in\mathbf{R}, and as morphisms (x,s)(x,s)(x,s)\to(x',s') paths γ:xx𝒫 1(M)\gamma:x\to x'\in\mathcal{P}_1(M) of proper time τ(γ)=ss\tau(\gamma)=s'-s.”

    Why do we consider groupoids here? I wouldn’t expect paths to have “inverses”, I’d expect them to have “adjoints” or maybe “opposites”.

    Shouldn’t there be a partial order somewhere related to causality?

    • CommentRowNumber45.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    Yes, Eric, right, you had a good point back then, I am now headed firmly in this direction.

    However, as i said before, the main provblem with the Kantization approach was that it didn’t realize differential cocycles in twisted cohomology, hence didn’t disstinguish “orbifold morphisms” from “paths”. In the new version of exercise in groupoidification - the path integral this is now imporved. Unfortunately, it also makes the discusison more involved. I’ll try to give a better exposition later. Maybe later today.

  6. I’ve completed reading through the nCafe’ entry. there is an 11 points road map to path integrals. steps 1-7 are worked out in full detail (at least in a discrete toy example, with a trivial vector bundle ove P 1(X)P_1(X), but let us play with this for time being). then we have:

    Step 8) Pull back a V-colored set along the map “in” Step 9) Push-forward a V-colored set along the map “out” Step 10) There it is – the path integral Step 11 +) The canonical path integral measure from the Leinster measure/ groupoid cardinality

    steps 8-9) should be just a particular case of push-pull described in #38 and (more precisely) in #41 above, so these two steps should be ok. (thanks Zoran for the f !f_! vs. f *f_* remark)

    step 10) should be taking V-cardinality of the last V-colored set one finds, so also this step should be ok (by the way, I’m now convinced that a section of a trivial bundle is a particular case of V-colored set, but are these latter who behave well under push-pull, so I’m converted to the V-colors now).

    step 11 +) seems to be completely missing at the moment. where do I look for it?

    • CommentRowNumber47.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    step 11 +) seems to be completely missing at the moment. where do I look for it?

    Section 1.4 here has some remarks. But a really good writeup I have not produced so far.

    Well, maybe I am right in the middle of producing it, there is this article that Zoran is pushing me to finish, which I should be doing right now instead of posting to the nForum…

    • CommentRowNumber48.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    But Domenico,

    as far as the recipe goes, there is no new step: we still just form the pull-push, and the formalsim takes care of everything. All we may have to do is identify the result as really being what is discussed in other language in the literature.

    Notably, say in the the example of DW theory, the field configurations

    hom[ΣΠ(Σ),BGBG] hom [\Sigma \to \mathbf{\Pi}(\Sigma), \mathbf{B}G \to \mathbf{B}G]

    is a nontrivial groupoid, so as we pull back groupoids to this, we pick up a copy of this groupoid with its automorphisms.

    Let’s look at the most simplified setup where there is a single point ** and a single path starting at that point, but that path has automorphisms, so is a *//G*//G. Then for K*K \to * an \infty-groupoid over the point, we pull-push it through

    *//G * * \array{ && {*}//G \\ & \swarrow && \searrow \\ {*} &&&& {*} }

    and obtain the groupoid K×*//G*K \times {*}//G \to {*} over the output point. So the groupoid cardinality coming from π 1\pi_1 of that will differ from that of KK by factors one over |G||G|. That’s really what that groupoid-cardinality/Leinster measure thing is about.

    The punchline is that if we set up the pull-push correctly, then there is no extra step involved.

    • CommentRowNumber49.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    Domenico,

    it is kind of remarkable that you are the first person apart from a very small number that I talked to in private, from whom I have an indication that he or she has read my article “exercise in groupoidification” and understood it.

    I don’t know if this means no-one else understood it (I can’t imagine that), but at least I never got any feedback from someone who understood it.

    • CommentRowNumber50.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    From here:

    This Lorentzian path (∞,1)-category is roughly described as follows:

    • its space of objects is Σ\Sigma;

    • the elements of its space of morphisms are generated from

      • morphisms γ:xy\gamma : x \to y given by smooth spacelike curves γ:[0,1]Σ\gamma : [0,1] \to \Sigma;

      • morphisms of the form xyx \to y for every xyx \leq y in the causal structure of Σ\Sigma.

    Why do these curves need to be smooth? Couldn’t they just as well be lightlike random walks? Or, why isn’t the second bullet sufficient?

    • CommentRowNumber51.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    it is kind of remarkable that you are the first person apart from a very small number that I talked to in private, from whom I have an indication that he or she has read my article “exercise in groupoidification” and understood it.

    I don’t know if this means no-one else understood it (I can’t imagine that), but at least I never got any feedback from someone who understood it.

    That’s why I’m so happy Domenico is here :) I wish dearly that I could understand. If two people on the planet understand it, the chances I will someday increases :)

    I’m not quite sure it is THE answer, but it rings of truth.

    • CommentRowNumber52.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    Why do these curves need to be smooth? Couldn’t they just as well be lightlike random walks? Or, why isn’t the second bullet sufficient?

    There is quite a bit of flexibility here. When you look at the constructon in From FQFT to AQFT, you see that all that really matters is that (in 2d) spacelike separated points are connected at all. (See also the remarks on the time-slice axiom).

    But the second bullet alone won’t be sufficient, because here is it crucial that these morphisms are future-directected paths.

    The main point is that the 2-cells are, in one way or other, regions “of spacelike width and future-directed height”. That’s what makes any 2-functor on this induce a local net of observables.

    • CommentRowNumber53.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    I think I get your point. If all we had was xyx\to y for xyx\le y, then we could have spacetime looptie loops :)

    So why not let XX be a directed space? Then the only way xyx\le y would be if the path xyx\to y was future directed and the second bullet would be sufficient (I think).

  7. Urs #49, Eric #51, I’m flattered! :)

    now I feel obliged to write something here on Diijkgraf-Witten and Yetter models, which could hopefully interest you (I’ve just read section 1.4 from Urs paper and fell in love for these toy models :) )

    but I’m going out for a while. will be back this evening.

    • CommentRowNumber55.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    now I feel obliged to write something here on Diijkgraf-Witten and Yetter models, which could hopefully interest you

    Oh! Oh! Please :) That would be awesome.

    I’ve just read section 1.4 from Urs paper and fell in love for these toy models :)

    By the way, why do people insist on calling these “toy models”? What if the continuum turned out to be the toy model and these finitary models actually turned out to be more fundamental? Bias! :)

    • CommentRowNumber56.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    I’ve just read section 1.4 from Urs paper and fell in love for these toy models :)

    By the way, which paper?

    • CommentRowNumber57.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    I’ve just read section 1.4 from Urs paper and fell in love for these toy models :)

    By the way, which paper?

    Mentioned in #47: these notes.

    Please note that these are old notes that have meanwhile be superceded by better stuff. In the unlikely case that you feel an urge to run around and show this to other people, then please check back with me first and I provide links to imporved accounts. Except for instance for that section 1,4 there

    So why not let X be a directed space? Then the only way x≤y would be if the path x→y was future directed and the second bullet would be sufficient (I think).

    No, somehow it seems I haven’t yet communicated yet what I have in mind. A Lorentzian manifold is a directed spac eof sorts, already, which is exhibited by the fact that its Lorentzian path (oo,1)-category is indeed that: an (oo,1)-category not all whose morphisms are invertible.

    Also closed timelike paths are not the problem here, everything I want to do can be done for Lorentzian spaces that are locally globaly hyperbolic (as discussed in the last section of my article).

    No, as I meant to say before, the crucial point is that causal subsets appear as top-dimension morphisms.

    • CommentRowNumber58.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    By the way (to Domenico or Zoran, or whoever is listening): where in the new version of exercise in groupoidification - the path integral I start using the pushout 2-categiry Vect BU(1)EBU(1)Vect \coprod_{\mathbf{B}U(1)} \mathbf{E}\mathbf{B}U(1), things get a bit sublte, as always when forming colimits of n-categories. I think what I am claiming is correct, but a careful reasoning requires a bit of care here.

    • CommentRowNumber59.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    I wrote:

    I think what I am claiming is correct,

    No, it’s not. I’ll rework the entry now to fix this, by falling back to “fake-flat” n-transport. Then it works again. It’s sufficient for the example with abelian gauge group anyway, but I had hoped it would work more generally. But maybe not.

  8. I’m now on Diijkgraaf-Witten model in Section 1.4 from Urs. there’s a point where I’m confused. on page 10 one reads

    To make this technically more easily tractable without losing any information, we may choose a point in each connected component of Σ\Sigma and let Π 1(Σ)\Pi_1(\Sigma) be instead the full subgroupoid of the fundamental groupoid on these chosen points. That makes the parameter space groupoid Π 1(Σ)\Pi_1(\Sigma) and hence also the configuration space groupoid hom(Π 1(Σ);BG)hom(\Pi_1(\Sigma);BG) a finite groupoid.

    does this mean that for Σ=S 3\Sigma=S^3 one has Π 1(Σ)\Pi_1(\Sigma) the terminal groupoid? I guess no, otherwise I would be confused by

    hom(Π 1(Σ),B 3U(1)) U(1)hom(\Pi_1(\Sigma),\mathbf{B}^3U(1))_\sim \simeq U(1)

    a few lines later, which I interpret as a (higher-)groupoid version of the topological equivalence hom(S 3, 3U(1)) U(1)hom(S^3,\mathcal{B}^3U(1))_\sim \simeq U(1).

    need help

    • CommentRowNumber61.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    Domenico,

    That's not well written and possibly subject to errors, as I see.

    We should be looking at morphisms \mathbf{\Pi}(\Sigma) \to \mathbf{B}G in the category of smooth \infty-groupoids. A priori this can be done choosing a Chech groupoid for \Sigma, but since G is finite a much smaller finite model is sufficient, obtained from a triangulation of \Sigma.

    In modern terms I would say: by adjunction (\Pi \dashv LConst \dashv \Gamma) and definition \mathbf{\Pi} = LConst\circ \Pi we have that \mathbf{\Pi}(\Sigma) \to \mathbf{B}G is adjunct to \Pi(\Sigma) \to \Gamma \mathbf{B}G = \mathcal{B}G, where \mathcal{B}G is supposed to denote the bare groupoid, and I am using that G is discrete. Here we may pick a finite equivalent model for \Pi(\Sigma).

    Sorry, that writeup you are looking at is probably really badly written.

    • CommentRowNumber62.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    wait. you’re saying that what there (in section 1.4, I mean) is Π 1\Pi_1 should rather be Π\Pi, right? (by the way, this would make hom(Π(S 3),B 3U(1)) U(1)hom(\Pi(S^3),B^3U(1))_\sim \simeq U(1) almost-trivially true)

    • CommentRowNumber63.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010

    Π 1\Pi_1 should rather be Π\Pi, right?

    Yes.

    …almost-trivially true

    Yes.

    Meanwhile, I have thought about how to construct that groupoid over Π(X)\Pi(X) that enters the “exercise on groupoidification” in a better way. But I need to do a telephone call first…

    • CommentRowNumber64.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 12th 2010
    • (edited Apr 12th 2010)

    I corrected that statement that involved pullback over that pushout category at “exercise in groupoidification”.

    I try to bring the entry into better shape, but here the key point:

    define EVect\mathbf{E}Vect to be the category given by the ordinary pullback

    EVect * k Vect I d 1 Vect, \array{ \mathbf{E}Vect &\to& * \\ \downarrow && \downarrow^{\mathrlap{k}} \\ Vect^I &\stackrel{d_1}{\to}& Vect } \,,

    where II is the interval category, Vect IVect^I the functor category and k:*Vectk : * \to Vect picks the ground field vector space. Via the remaining map d 0:Vect IVectd_0 : Vect^I \to Vect this maps to VectVect and then further to Vect BEBVect \coprod_{\mathbf{B}\mathbb{C}} \mathbf{E}\mathbf{B}\mathbb{C}.

    We want to pull back

    EVect Id EVect Vect VectEB \array{ \mathbf{E}Vect &\stackrel{Id}{\to}& \mathbf{E}Vect \\ \downarrow && \downarrow \\ Vect &\to& Vect \coprod \mathbf{E}\mathbf{B}\mathbb{C} }

    along our differential cocycle to X×ΣX \times \Sigma, i.e. form the pullback of the diagram

    EVect Σ×X Vect EVect Σ Π(Σ)×Π(X) EB BVect Π(Σ) \array{ && \mathbf{E}Vect \\ && \downarrow & \searrow \\ \Sigma \times X & \to& Vect && \mathbf{E}Vect \\ \downarrow & \searrow && \searrow & \downarrow \\ \Sigma && \mathbf{\Pi}(\Sigma)\times \mathbf{\Pi}(X) &\to& \mathbf{E}\mathbf{B}\mathbb{C}\coprod_{\mathbf{B}\mathbb{C}} Vect \\ & \searrow & \downarrow \\ && \mathbf{\Pi}(\Sigma) }

    Over X×ΣX \times \Sigma this is nothing but the total space of the vector bundle over XX, pulled back to Σ\Sigma. Over Π(X×Σ)\mathbf{\Pi}(X \times\Sigma) this should now correctly be the groupoid as stated before: objects are triples (x,σ,v)(x,\sigma, v)vv a vector in the fiber over XX, and morphisms are paths γ\gamma in XX and Σ\Sigma, taking vv to tra(γ)(v)tra(\gamma)(v), where tratra is the corresponding parallel transport.

    Notice, crucially, that the nontrivial 2-morphisms in Π(X×Σ)\mathbf{\Pi}(X \times \Sigma) drop out in the pullback, as there are none in EVect\mathbf{E}Vect. So it comes out nicely.

    The only point that I am now wondering about is what intrinsic oo-categorical construction this models. I mean, we know that over X×ΣX \times \Sigma the ordinary pullback of EVect\mathbf{E}Vect models the lax pullback (really: comma object) of the point. But in the above construction it is key that EVect\mathbf{E}Vect is also used over Π(X×Σ)\mathbf{\Pi}(X \times \Sigma), instead of E(Vect B𝒞EB𝒞)\mathbf{E}(Vect \coprod_{\mathbf{B}\mathcal{C}} \mathbf{E}\mathbf{B}\mathcal{C}). This means that we are computing some lax pullback (or rather comma object) of the point in [I,Sh (,2)(CartSp)][I,Sh_{(\infty,2)}(CartSp)], but subject to some constraint. I am not sure yet how to state that fully intrinsically…

  9. still playing with baby toys. Dijkgraaf-Witten, at the moment. I’m now convinced that a way of looking at that is as to a manifestation of the homotopy hypothesis at its best. let me explain what I mean by making a step backwards and going from baby toys to toddler toys: finite group cohomology.

    here we have a finite (or discrete) group GG, and a discrete abelian group AA, and we want to define H n(G;A)H^n(G;A). a way of doing this is to realize everything topologically: from GG we build the classifying space G\mathcal{B}G, and from AA the Eilenberg-MacLane space nA=K(A,n)\mathcal{B}^n A=K(A,n). then we consider the space of maps hom(G, nA)hom(\mathcal{B}G,\mathcal{B}^nA) (these are our cocycles) and take its π 0\pi_0.

    this way we have a in a certain sense familiar (topological spaces, continuous maps, homotopies,..) description of the set H n(G;A)H^n(G;A). the drawback is that the topological spaces involved here are “gigantic” (infinite dimensional CW-complexes), where we had started with a very “little” datum: a finite group. so one can wonder if there is a finite model for the above construction, and the homotopy hypotesis serves it on a silver plate. namely, since GG is discrete, G\mathcal{B}G is a 1-type, and nothing but the topological realization of the delooping groupoid BG\mathbf{B}G (boldface BB here); similarly nA\mathcal{B}^n A is the topological realization of the nn-groupoid B nA\mathbf{B}^n A, and the space of cocycles is hom(BG,B nA)hom(B G,B^n A). since GG is a finite group, BGB G is a finite groupoid, and so hom(BG,B nA)hom(B G,B^n A) is a finite set. this set is the finite model for hom(G, nA)hom(\mathcal{B}G,\mathcal{B}^n A) we were looking for.

    now, the Dijkgraaf-Witten model (in the next post)

    • CommentRowNumber66.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    Domenico,

    so far: yes, exactly. I suppose you know it, but this story is also at group cohomology.

  10. yes, indeed I knew: I was reporting it here planning to write a post on Dijkgraaf-Witten as self-contained as possible, but I had to quit writing, and so it remained half-way. I’ll write the second part in a couple of hours.

    • CommentRowNumber68.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    ah, then please consider typing it into Dijkgraaf-Witten theory

    • CommentRowNumber69.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    No worries. With “Source” he can type it anywhere he likes. I’ll copy over anything that appears here :)

    • CommentRowNumber70.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    Just to prove that I’m not just saying that, I added Domenico’s comment above about finite group cohomology to Dijkgraaf-Witten theory :)

    • CommentRowNumber71.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    No worries.

    Not worried, just busy. I could do all this myself – if the day had more hours. Thanks for your helpl. I added some hyperlinks.

    • CommentRowNumber72.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010
    • (edited Apr 13th 2010)

    so, the Dijkgraaf-Witten model.

    here the topological picture can be given as follows. we have a parameter space Σ\Sigma, a finite group GG, and cocycle :G 3U(1)\nabla: \mathcal{B}G\to \mathcal{B}^3U(1) (note that since we are looking at U(1)U(1) as to a discrete group here, this cocycle corresponds to a flat 3-bundle over G\mathcal{B}G. similarly, a map ΣG\Sigma\to \mathcal{B}G is the datum of a flat GG-bundle over Σ\Sigma.

    then we have the following diagram of topological spaces

    hom(Σ,G)×Σ Σ G 3U(1) \array{ &&hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G)\times\Sigma&&& \\ &\swarrow&&\searrow&& \\ \Sigma&&&&\mathcal{B}G&\stackrel{\nabla}{\to}\mathcal{B}^3U(1) }

    push-pull along this diagram gives a homotopy class of maps Σ 3U(1)\Sigma\to \mathcal{B}^3U(1) . this uses in an essential way the fact that the set of homotopy classes of maps Σ 3U(1)\Sigma\to\mathcal{B}^3U(1) is an abelian group, namely H 3(Σ;U(1)H^3(\Sigma;U(1). in particular, for Σ=S 3\Sigma=S^3 we obtain an element of H 3(S 3;U(1))=U(1)H^3(S^3;U(1))=U(1).

    (to be continued. it seems today I’m unable to find time for writing. hopefully this evening (for European readers))

    • CommentRowNumber73.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010
    • (edited Apr 13th 2010)

    (note that since we are looking at U(1) as to a discrete group here, this cocycle corresponds to a flat 3-bundle over \mathcal{B}G

    Yes. Though I would like to phrase this as follows, which works even assuming we regard U(1) with its standard smooth structure.

    We are working in the locally contractible (infinity,1)-topos of oo-sheaves on CartSp. As discussed at path oo-groupoid (schreiber) we have there apart from the definition

     \mathbf{\Pi} := LConst \circ \Pi

    also the relation

     \Pi \circ LConst \simeq Id\,.

    Now, G being discrete means that for  \mathcal{B}G \in \infty Grpd its bare delooping groupoid, we have

    \mathbf{B}G = LConst \mathcal{B}G\,.

    Because an oo-stack on CartSp being constant means nothing but that regard as a Lie \infty-groupoid it has the discrete smooth structure.

    So with the above it follows that

    \mathbf{\Pi}(\mathbf{B}G) := \mathbf{\Pi} LConst \mathcal{B}G :=LConst \Pi LConst \mathcal{B}G \simeq LConst \mathcal{B}G = \mathbf{B}G \,.

    So every smooth principal infinity-bundle on \mathbf{B}G \in \mathbf{H} extends necessarily and uniquely to a flat principal oo-bundle, along the constant path inclusion  \mathbf{B}G \to \mathbf{\Pi}(\mathbf{B}G) = \mathbf{B}G.

    There are a handful of such statements which all follow just from formal manipulations of the triple of adjoint oo-functors provided once we have a locally contractible oo-topos.

  11. I’ve added a couple of comments in post 72 above, by editing it. have to go now.

    • CommentRowNumber75.
    • CommentAuthorzskoda
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    I have placed the link in the Latest Changes, but regarding that Urs’s part overlaps with the topic of this discussion, let me anounce also here that the overview paper on categorical symmetries in mathematical physics which Urs and I published last year (written in Dec 2008) is now being expanded just slightly for the arxiv. The nlab page for it is Categorified Symmetries (zoranskoda). Roughly the early part of the paper is mainly written by me, and the later by Urs and has much overlap with other things Urs has been doing, cinluding his paper with Sati and Stasheff and our big “nactwist” preprint.

    In latest changes discussion, I also posted a question on surpressing automatic numbering in the toc which I cut and pasted from the pdf and it displays wrongly. Any suggestions and corrections are welcome.

    • CommentRowNumber76.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010
    • (edited Apr 13th 2010)

    Right. Domenico, I hope this doesn't come across weird now. I hope I did mention that I am busy finishing up some notes with Zoran, that have some overlap with the discussion here. It's of course hardly a coincidence, really.

  12. ok, I’ve got it, it’s easy!

    we start with the background field :G 3U(1)\nabla: \mathcal{B}G\to \mathcal{B}^3U(1). then we transgress it to Σ\Sigma, i.e., we apply the hom(Σ,)hom(\Sigma,-) functor. this way we get a morphism hom(Σ,G)hom(Σ, 3U(1))hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G)\to hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}^3U(1)). passing to connected components we get a function π 0hom(Σ,G)π 0hom(Σ, 3U(1))\pi_0 hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G)\to \pi_0 hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}^3U(1)), i.e., a function

    f:H 1(Σ,G)H 3(Σ,U(1)) f:H^1(\Sigma,G)\to H^3(\Sigma,U(1))

    since H 3(Σ,U(1))H^3(\Sigma,U(1)) is an abelian group, once we fix a measure dμd\mu on the set H 1(Σ,G)H^1(\Sigma,G), we can integrate ff to get an element Z (Σ)Z_\nabla(\Sigma) in H 3(Σ,U(1))H^3(\Sigma,U(1)).

    so the only problem left is how to choose the integration measure. the right choice consists in looking at H 1(Σ,G)H^1(\Sigma,G) as the set of isomorphism classes of objects in the oo-groupoid hom(Σ,G)hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G). then we have a canonical measure on this set: the Leinster measure.

    next step consists in translating this topological description into a oo-groupoidal one, which will turn out to be completely explicit and combinatorial.

  13. Urs, how could that come across weird? just do not worry about :)

    • CommentRowNumber79.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010
    • (edited Apr 13th 2010)

    how could that come across weird? just do not worry about :)

    Okay, good. I have had funny experiences with some people concerning verbal exchange of ideas. I didn’t think you are one of them, but since then I am being very cautious. Or at least very nervous. :-)

    Anyway, I hope we once write some article together, you and me.

    Now concerning your integration prescirption above:

    Yes, I meant to indicate further above that this comes out automatically from the pull-push-prescription:

    take your Σ\Sigma to be part of a span Σ inΣΣ out\Sigma_{in } \to \Sigma \leftarrow \Sigma_{out} and hom that into BG\mathbf{B}G. Actually, you should really be homming it into that bundle over BG\mathbf{B}G which further above we called the Atiyah groupoid (though that wasn’t a good name), but a map into BG\mathbf{B}G will be part of it. Then you are to pull-push sections through this, in terms of \infty-groupoids over these hom-groupoids. This does what you just described in words: it sums up all values of the transgressed background field and divides (after taking groupoid cardinality ) by the automorphism groups.

    If you see what I mean. I should finally write that out formally, I guess…

    • CommentRowNumber80.
    • CommentAuthorzskoda
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    Igor Sharygin and I are working (now with big breaks already for a year) on a small project concerning algebroids. In fact there is a PBW theorem there which is classical and is of course related to sort of formal exponential map. Thing which may be interesting to the people in the line of this discussion is that we are trying to use a connection on the algebroid (if it is given) to CORRECT the symmetrization map (effectively correcting the exponential map hence). I want to use that for some problems of quantization. I hope the work can have enough descent form to post some of it to nlab (now it is still in a messy phase) by say early next month…

  14. Urs, so you’re saying that what I’ve been describing so far is the vacuum-to-vacuum expectation corresponding to the manifold with no boundary Σ\Sigma. next step is to build an extended 3-dimensional TQFT, of which what I described above is just the tip of the iceberg. ok, let’s do that.

    at the present I have oly a very vague idea of how things should work: the background field is the datum of a 3-bundle with a (flat) connection, so we have nn-transport functors for n=1,2,3n=1,2,3, and we can use these to define operators between sections which look like “the sum over all manifolds spanning between two boundary data”. need to think more on this.

    • CommentRowNumber82.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 13th 2010

    Urs, so you’re saying that what I’ve been describing so far is the vacuum-to-vacuum expectation corresponding to the manifold with no boundary Σ. next step is to build an extended 3-dimensional TQFT, of which what I described above is just the tip of the iceberg. ok, let’s do that.

    That’s true, I should have said it along these lines, yes. What I kept getting is is producing the actual propagation functor. By the way, the canonical reference to see what this functor should be is Freed-Quinn.

    at the present I have oly a very vague idea of how things should work: the background field is the datum of a 3-bundle with a (flat) connection, so we have n-transport functors for n=1,2,3, and we can use these to define operators between sections which look like “the sum over all manifolds spanning between two boundary data”. need to think more on this.

    Yeah, I am also still lacking the fully extended picture, that goes down to the point starting from the kind of data we are talking about. I think what I sketched so far gives the Freed-Quinn propagation 1-functor. But there should be a nice way to go all the way to the point .Towards the end of that writeup with Zoran there are some reemarks on how for instance the modular tensor category should appear along these lines, which is what the DW theory is supposed to assign to circles. But I am lacking a fully coherent full picture, still.

  15. I have a sort of geometrical picture in mind, but I lack a crucial final step related to integration-without-integration. let me try explain what I miss. if Σ\Sigma is a closed (compact, oriented) dd-manifold, I’d like to think of a map ω:Σ d\omega:\Sigma\to \mathcal{B}^d\mathbb{R} as a closed real dd-form on Σ\Sigma. I can integrate by first looking at it as an element of hom(Σ, d)hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}^d\mathbb{R}) and then taking its isomorphism class, i.e. [ω]π 0hom(Σ, d)=H d(Σ,)=[\omega]\in\pi_0hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}^d\mathbb{R})=H^d(\Sigma,\mathbb{R})=\mathbb{R}. ok, fine and elegant :) but if ω\omega is a closed dd-form, then I can integrate it not only on the whole Σ\Sigma, but also on a d-simplex of Σ\Sigma. this time, clearly, looking at ω:Δ d d\omega:\Delta^d\to \mathcal{B}^d\mathbb{R} and then taking the isomorphism class would not work, since H d(Δ d,)=0H^d(\Delta^d,\mathbb{R})=0. however, if we consider relative cohomology instead, we find H d(Δ d,Δ d;)=H d(S d,)=H^d(\Delta^d,\partial\Delta^d;\mathbb{R})=H^d(S^d,\mathbb{R})=\mathbb{R}, and this very mich looks liked the seeked integration-without-integration. so, what I miss is: can I see relative cohomology H d(M,L;)H^d(M,L;\mathbb{R}) in terms of homotopy classes of maps M dM\to \mathcal{B}^d\mathbb{R} relative to LL?

    If so I’d be very happy.. :)

    • CommentRowNumber84.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 14th 2010

    I know you guys are working on a “toy model”, but I keep wondering if there is a “toy toy model”. Instead of a finite group on a smooth manifold, what about a finite group on a finite discretized space, e.g. a grid of something? Would you then be able to do all this with matrices?

  16. well, the idea should be that for what concerns here, a smooth manifold can be thought of as a discretized space, e.g., by considering a triangulation of its. computations with the discrete model are the ones on the oo-groupoid side, while “continuous computations” are those on the topological side. the equivalence of the two models then gives the following magic trick: whichever triangulation one takes, the resutl of the discrete computations will be the same :)

    (the toy toy toy example of this is the computation of cellular cohomology vs. singular cohomology)

    • CommentRowNumber86.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 14th 2010
    • (edited Apr 14th 2010)

    Domenico,

    yes. Yes.

    I believe that relative cohomology in an (\infty,1)-topos \mathbf{H} is the hom-complexes in the arrow-category \mathbf{H}^I. That's what I have been using to describe twisted differential cohomology, which is flat differential cohomology with some coefficients, relative to the constraint that restricting to constant paths makes this land in more restrictive coefficients.

    So here in your case, the relative cohomology is

    \pi_0 \mathbf{H}^I([\partial \Delta^n \to \Delta^n, \; * \to \mathbf{B}^n \mathbb{R}])\,.

    By the way, I am tinking that in the context of quantization, this, too, can usefully be understood in terms of homming cobordism cospans into something, which really means homming  \Sigma_{in} \coprod \Sigma_{out} \to \Sigma into something. For path integral quantization, we fix the states on these boundaries  \Sigma_{in} and  \Sigma_{out} and do some integral over all values in the thing  \Sigma in the middle. That means working in relative cohomology.

    • CommentRowNumber87.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 14th 2010

    I once started an entry on this relative cohomology in an oo-topos at relative cohomology (schreiber), but didn't develop that entry much further.

  17. By the way, I am tinking that in the context of quantization, this, too, can usefully be understood in terms of homming cobordism cospans into something, which really means homming \Sigma_{in} \coprod \Sigma_{out} \to \Sigma into something. For path integral quantization, we fix the states on these boundaries \Sigma_{in} and \Sigma_{out} and do some integral over all values in the thing \Sigma in the middle. That means working in relative cohomology.

    that’s exactly what I had in mind. but without identifying homotopy classes of maps with fixed boundary conditions with relative cohomology I wasn’t able to make sense of integration (I mean, standard integration with an abelian group as target). now I can write another bit of the topological picture :)

    • CommentRowNumber89.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 14th 2010
    • (edited Apr 14th 2010)

    Eric writes:

    I know you guys are working on a "toy model",

    This is in fact a misinterpretion. On the contrary, what Domenico and I are discussing here is the question how to work in as mind-boggling-generality as possible!

    To the extent that it works and is understood, we are talking here about internalizing quantization of differential cocycles to sigma-model QFTs in any suitable (oo,1)-topos! Where suitable probably means precisely: locally contractible.

    We are just cross-checking here the very general development with special well understood examples, as a guiding light. DW theory happens to be the Drosophila fly of TQFTs: close to being as simple as possible while still being interesting enough to serve as a template for the general case. So we are cross-checking against that.

    • CommentRowNumber90.
    • CommentAuthorEric
    • CommentTimeApr 14th 2010

    I wouldn’t be excited about this conversation if it were merely about toy models :)

    I have some philosophical/ontological gripes, but I will save those for another day :)

  18. Urs, do not frighten Eric with locally contractible (oo,1)-topoi.. our flies are posing a quite general question at the moment: which is the vector space DW-theory is supposed to associate with a surface? the original Dijkgraaf-Witten paper is extremely elusive on this point. they say there must be some Hilbert space Σ\mathcal{H}_\Sigma associated with a surface Σ\Sigma, but this is never explicitly defined. the only thing they say is that it should be a “quantization” of the phase space 𝒱 Σ=Hom(π 1(Σ),G)/G\mathcal{V}_\Sigma=Hom(\pi_1(\Sigma),G)/G given by the set of isomorphism classes of of GG-bundles over Σ\Sigma and that, despite one could naively expect that dim Σ=|𝒱 Σ|dim \mathcal{H}_\Sigma=|\mathcal{V}_\Sigma|, this dimension in general only satisfies dim Σ|𝒱 Σ|dim \mathcal{H}_\Sigma\leq|\mathcal{V}_\Sigma|. here the dimension of Σ\mathcal{H}_\Sigma is computed without knowing what Σ\mathcal{H}_\Sigma is using the standard TQFT trick of computing the 3-manifold invariant for the closed 3-manifold Σ×S 1\Sigma\times S^1.

    in the topological description of DW we are pursuing here, it is convenient to think of 𝒱 Σ\mathcal{V}_\Sigma as π 0hom(Σ,G)\pi_0hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G).

    a vague indication of what Σ\mathcal{H}_\Sigma could be is given by the bit of definition of the linear mapping Φ M: Σ in Σ out\Phi_M:\mathcal{H}_{\Sigma_{in}}\to\mathcal{H}_{\Sigma_{out}} associated with a bordism M:Σ inΣ outM:\Sigma_{in}\to \Sigma_{out}. they say that “for fixed morphisms γ in:π 1(Σ in)G\gamma_{in}:\pi_1(\Sigma_{in})\to G and γ out:π 1(Σ out)G\gamma_{out}:\pi_1(\Sigma_{out})\to G, the kernel of Φ M\Phi_M is given by

    Φ M(γ in,γ out)=1|G| γHom(π 1(M),G)W(γ) \Phi_M(\gamma_{in},\gamma_{out})=\frac{1}{|G|}\sum_{\gamma\in Hom(\pi_1(M),G)}W(\gamma)

    where the summation is over those γ\gamma that restrict to γ in\gamma_{in} and γ out\gamma_{out} at the boundaries.” here W(γ)W(\gamma) is the 3-manifold (with boundary) invariant associated with an homomorphism γ:π 1(M)G\gamma:\pi_1(M)\to G.

    despite having no clear idea of what Σ\mathcal{H}_\Sigma should be, the above formula for matrix elements admits a simple and clear expression in terms of the topological picture used in previous posts. namely, consider the inclusion Σ inΣ outM\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to M (and assume MM is connceted). for a fixed map γ inγ out:Σ inΣ outG\gamma_{in}\coprod \gamma_{out}\colon \Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to\mathcal{B}G, consider the relative hom-space

    hom(Σ inΣ outM;Σ inΣ outγ inγ outG)hom(\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to M; \Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\stackrel{\gamma_{in}\coprod \gamma_{out}}{\longrightarrow}\mathcal{B}G)

    and use the cocycle :G 3U(1)\nabla:\mathcal{B}G\to \mathcal{B}^3U(1) to transgress this to a map

    hom(Σ inΣ outM;Σ inΣ outγ inγ outG)hom(Σ inΣ outM;* 3U(1))hom(\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to M; \Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\stackrel{\gamma_{in}\coprod \gamma_{out}}{\longrightarrow}\mathcal{B}G)\to hom(\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to M; *\to \mathcal{B}^3U(1))

    where the fact that a map from a 2-dimensional manifold to 3U(1)\mathcal{B}^3U(1) is homotopy equivalent to a constant map has been used. passing to π 0\pi_0’s we find

    π 0hom(Σ inΣ outM;Σ inΣ outγ inγ outG)H 3(M,Σ inΣ out;U(1))=U(1)\pi_0hom(\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to M; \Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\stackrel{\gamma_{in}\coprod \gamma_{out}}{\longrightarrow}\mathcal{B}G)\to H^3(M,\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out};U(1))=U(1)

    (here we used integration without integration). finally we integrate this map over π 0hom(Σ inΣ outM;Σ inΣ outγ inγ outG)\pi_0hom(\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to M; \Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\stackrel{\gamma_{in}\coprod \gamma_{out}}{\longrightarrow}\mathcal{B}G) to get the element Φ M(γ in,γ out)\Phi_M(\gamma_{in},\gamma_{out}) in U(1)U(1).

    • CommentRowNumber92.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 14th 2010
    • (edited Apr 14th 2010)

    Yes, that looks good, something like that. Maybe you need an extra constraint on the relative cohomology to ensure that in

    hom(Σ inΣ outM;Σ inΣ outγ inγ outG)hom(\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\to M; \Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out}\stackrel{\gamma_{in}\coprod \gamma_{out}}{\longrightarrow}\mathcal{B}G)

    the top part of the commuting diagrams is really the identity. What you really want at this point is morphism in the undercategory (Σ inΣ out)/H(\Sigma_{in}\coprod\Sigma_{out})/\mathbf{H}.

    But apart from such details, yes, that should be the way it works. One should find the fully systematic prescription behind these kind of operations.

    If we do start with a notion of 3-vector space – something like a weak algebra object in the category of bimodules for instance – and pick a representation ρ:B 3U(1)3Vect \rho : \mathbf{B}^3 U(1) \to 3 Vect , then the “exercise in groupoidification”-prescription is supposed to give this. But it’s a bit tedious to unwind…

    • CommentRowNumber93.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 14th 2010
    • (edited Apr 14th 2010)

    I agree we should pick up some representation ρ:B 3U(1)3Vect\rho:\mathbf{B}^3U(1)\to 3Vect. however, this datum is apparently missing in the original DW paper, so I guess there shoud be some notion of defining representation of B 3U(1)\mathbf{B}^3U(1) implicitly used (the 3Vect analogue of the fact C\mathbf{C} is the defining representation of the group U(1)U(1)).

    in the meanwhile I’ve been thinking to the DW argument to exclude some of the isomorphism classes of GG-bundles over the surface Σ\Sigma from the generators of the vector space Σ\mathcal{H}_\Sigma (in their words: “So in that case the bundle over Σ\Sigma described by γ\gamma does not contribute a quantum state, and the dimension of the Hilbert space is smaller than expected.”) in the topological picture I’ve been trying to describe so far, this should read as follows: the space hom(Σ,G)hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G) has several distinct connected components. for each component KK there is a 1-dimensional representation of π 1(K)\pi_1(K), and only components for which this representation is trivial survive.

    despite this interpretation is a very rough idea, I can see something good in it: we are looking at the set π 0hom(Σ,G)\pi_0hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G), which is supposed to be a basis for Σ\mathcal{H}_\Sigma not as a bare set, but as something which remembers its groupoidal origin. mmm.. looks like having a collection of BG i\mathbf{B}G_i’s and over each one a rank 1 vector bundle; of this bundle one takes G iG_i-invariant sections, so only the trivial G iG_i-actions survive. but his one should be able to say this more intrinsically, without choosing the representative basepoints which reduced the groupoid to the form BG i\coprod \mathbf{B}G_i. namely, one should have a natural line bundle over the groupoid, and invariant sections should be considered. I must have read something like this in Freed-Quinn paper.

    • CommentRowNumber94.
    • CommentAuthorTim_Porter
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2010

    I had not been following this thread, but it looks as if I should. I have been trying to understand the construction by Turaev of a primitive cohomological HQFT given a cohomology class in $H^{d+1}(G,K^*)$. All of his vector spaces are of dimension 1, and he twists things using the $d+1$-cocycle at the level of a basis choice. He says he adapted the method from Freed-Quinn.

    (The method is simple to apply and quite clear in his 1999 HQFT paper. I have been trying to fit it into the framework of a `relative' TQFT as I put forward some time ago in a research proposal and is summarised in my private web area. )

    If you combine that construction of Turaev's with the ideas of Moore and Segal then something very like what you are proposing seems to pop out. (I have not got yet to the point where I have written down the details for the Menagerie but it is slowly progressing in that direction (provided I can make sense of it all).

    • CommentRowNumber95.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2010
    • (edited Apr 15th 2010)

    Tim, thanks for pointing our attention to your research proposal. that seems indeed to be quite related to what we are discussing here: looking forward for your contribution to this thread!

    I’ll add a few details to what I was writing yesterday. the first one is purely algebraic (and well well well known): given a representation of a finite group HH on a vector space VV (on a characteristic zero field), the operator

    1|H| hHρ(h) \frac{1}{|H|}\sum_{h\in H}\rho(h)

    is the projection on the subset of invariant vectors. so if V is 1-dimensional, this operator is either the identity (trivial representation) or zero (nontrivial representation). this remark should allow to think of “invariant sections” as a push-forward.

    next, all we need here seems to be a natural flat U(1)U(1) bundle over the hom-spaces hom(Σ,G)hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G). in other words we have to associate an element in U(1)U(1) to a homotopy class of paths with fixed endpoints in hom(Σ,G)hom(\Sigma,\mathcal{B}G). but this is straightforward: a single path in this class is an element in hom(Σ×[0,1],G)hom(\Sigma\times [0,1],\mathcal{B}G), with fixed boundary values; we transgress it to 3U(1)\mathcal{B}^3U(1) and then integrate over the whole homotopy class (see #91). that’s it.

    • CommentRowNumber96.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 15th 2010

    Thanks, Domenico and Tim. Just in case you are wondering: I’ll be very busy with something else that I need to take care of. Will come back to the discussion here later.

  19. a very quick and short post, now; reconnecting later.

    there’s a simple extended tqft pattern emerging here. we start with closed 3-manifolds, and we have closed 3-manifold —-> element in the abelian group U(1) then we generalize this to 3-manifolds with boundary to get 3-manifold with fixed boundary data –> element in U(1) this can be reread as 3-manifold with boundary –> {boundary data –> U(1)] or, even better 3-manifold with boundary –> matrix of U(1)-elements with indices corresponding to boundary data considering free U(1)-modules generated by boundary data, this finally becomes closed 2-manifold –> vector space; 3-manifold with boundary –> linear operator between the boundary vector spaces

    the only step we need to make to go from numbers to vector spaces has been going from cohomology to relative cohomology. so the pattern should continue in a (in a sense) straightforward way: if we are able to associate a vector space to a closed 2-manifold, then we should also be able to associate a vector space to a 2-manifold with fixed boundary data. but then this should allow us to associate with a 2-manifold with boundary a “matrix of vector spaces”, which we could use as an operator between “vectors of vector spaces”, and the latter sould be nothing but Kapranov-Voevodsky 2-vector spaces.

    • CommentRowNumber98.
    • CommentAuthordomenico_fiorenza
    • CommentTimeApr 16th 2010
    • (edited Apr 16th 2010)

    I see the answer. it’s simple, it’s elegant, it’s completely abstract nonsense, it’s totally nPOV, and I absolutely do not exactly know what it means. in a word, it’s perfect :)

    cohomology is a number (this should be read as “integrating a top degree cohomology class one gets a number” but “cohomology is a number” is a much more effective slogan :) ). relative cohomology is a linear operator (i.e., a morphism of vector spaces). relative relative cohomology is a 2-linear operator (a 2-morphism of 2-vector spaces). relative relative relative cohomology is a 3-linear operator. and so on.

    so, in the DW model one should be able to describe the 3-linear operator associated with a 3-simplex, and that would encode the whole theory.

    now we only need to go from nonsense to formal statements. to begin with: what is relative relative cohomology?

    ok, I’ve dome my duty for today. now I can go and take a cappuccino, and then come back and read Urs post

    created [[relative relative cohomology in a (oo,1)-topos]].

    :)

  20. quite incredibly Urs has not been creating relative relative cohomology in an (oo,1)-topos, yet.. so it seems I’ll have to :)

    here is my proposal: generalizing Urs idea for relative cohomology in an (oo,1)-topos from #86 above, relative relative cohomology in an (oo,1)-topos HH should be hom(Δ 2,H)hom(\Delta^2,H), where Δ 2\Delta^2 is the second oriental. and so on. this points to ω\omega-nerves, but I have to think more carefully to this.

    O Urs, Where Art Thou?

    :)

    • CommentRowNumber100.
    • CommentAuthorUrs
    • CommentTimeApr 16th 2010

    Hi Domenico,

    sorry, Thursdays and Fridays is our oo-category seminar-preparation and seminar days. I am entirely absorbed chatting infty cats here with Ieke. I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.