Want to take part in these discussions? Sign in if you have an account, or apply for one below
Vanilla 1.1.10 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Hello,
Let be a category and let be the category of subcategories of . Then is a functor and it’s colimit is .
Is ?
Sorry, I’m having some trouble parsing this. If I have an object of , which subcategory is supposed to be? Ordinarily I would interpret the notation as denoting the comma category whose objects are morphisms where is an object of , and whose morphisms are commutative triangles with vertex , but that’s not a subcategory of .
As for the next part, am I to interpret the nerve we’re taking the colimit of as this composite:
assuming that the first arrow makes sense?
Hi Todd,
Thanks for you quick reply.
Your interpretation of is the same as mine. So is your interpretation of the the the nerve we’re taking colimits of.
I think of as a subcategory of by sending the object to and the morphism to the morphism .
Well, it’s not a subcategory by any definition I know of (certainly not injective on objects; it’s faithful but not full), but it seems not to matter since we can just bypass and go straight to . Someone around here may know right away, but I’ll try to give it a think when I get a chance.
Yes of course, you’re right. is not a subcategory or for general categories . However, I neglected to mention that in the particular situation that I’m considering, is a partially ordered set. In particular, it’s hom-sets have cardinality at most 1. I think that for such categories , is a subcategory of .
I also agree with you that this point doesn’t really matter anyway since we can bypass PC and go straight to .
I would have saved confusion if I simply stated things that way to start with. Thanks for helping me clarify my question. I just hope that someone can give me an answer.
dan
This is related to questions about test categories or the like. I recall seeing some result like this in the book on the homotopy theory of Grothendieck by Maltsiniotis, but my memory may be faulty.
Dan, I’ve thought a little about your question, and I think the answer is ’yes’, and the answer is not hard to see. Let’s see if I have this right:
Your statement about the colimit in of the being isomorphic to intrigued me – I had never seen that before – but on reflection it was something fairly obvious, in fact basically the Yoneda lemma in disguise. The objects of are equivalence classes of arrows where the equivalence is generated by
and it is immediate that every is equivalent to ; this of course is just a form of the Yoneda lemma.
Now let’s look at your problem, which compares the to the colimit of
Since colimits in are computed pointwise, we just have to show the colimit of
where is evaluation at an object , agrees with . This is
Now an -simplex in the comma category , which is an element of this composite, is the same as an -simplex beginning with the vertex , and the colimit (in ) consists of equivalence classes of -simplices where a simplex beginning with is deemed equivalent to a simplex beginning with obtained by pulling back along any . And again, it is a triviality that each -simplex
is equivalent to
but the collection of such is the same as . This proves your conjecture.
Edit: By the way, this reminds me of the tangent category stuff that originated at the n-Café in a discussion that included Urs, David Roberts, and me, and which was developed further by Schreiber-Roberts. I think I recall now remarking on the Yoneda lemma in this connection.
Now that I’ve had a chance to think about this properly, Todd is exactly right. It is also a special case of a general fact about (2-sided) bar constructions. Specifically, the nerve of C is the bar construction (where denotes the functor constant at a terminal object), while the nerve of is the bar construction . Since colimits of a functor are given by tensor products of functors , and such tensor products come inside a bar construction (since colimits commute with colimits), we have
where by the co-Yoneda lemma.
Ah, ah, ah – excellent point, Mike. Thanks.
1 to 9 of 9