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I am a bit stuck/puzzled with the following. Maybe you have an idea:
I have a group object and a morphism . I have a model for the universal -bundle (an object weakly equivalent to the point with a fibration ).
I have another object weakly equivalent to the point such that I get a commuting diagram
Here is not groupal and i write only for the heck of it and to indicate that this is contractible and the vertical morphisms above are monic (cofibrations if due care is taken).
So I have acting on and the coequalizer of that action exists and is
I can also consider the colimit of the diagram
That gives me a canonical morphism fitting in total into a diagram
Now here comes finally the question: I know that the coequalizer of is a model for the homotopy colimit over the diagram
as you can imagine. But I am stuck: what intrinsic -categorical operation is a model of?
I must be being dense….
Not sure if it helps to see the pattern or distract from its general structure: but my detailed setup is described in a bit more detail (though still in a rough fashion) here.
I don’t understand the definition of K; is there a typo in the displayed equation after “I can also consider the colimit K of the diagram”?
was supposed to be the coequalizer of the two composite maps
But wait, I guess I am being stupid….
Right, so I guess i simply mean that the square
is a pushout.
Is a cofibration? If not, then it seems that that pushout has no homotopical meaning. If so, then it’s an acyclic cofibration, since both EG and EQ are contractible, hence is also an acyclic cofibration and thus a weak equivalence, so K is the same as BG. Regardless, it doesn’t seem that K can contain any information about Q, since that pushout doesn’t contain Q anywhere.
Yeah, it looks puzzling.
I should turn the question around:
given a morphism in an -category , where happens to be a group object. Does this induce any canonical morphism out of the delooping ?
(Feel free to assume some extra properties if that helps make you think of something.)
Well, I should maybe add the following: that morphsm is part of a fiber sequence
In the case that happens to be twice deloopable, this continues as
and that is what I need.
So one way to ask what I am asking is: in the case that is not twice deloopable, what’s a reaonable universal approximation to the non-existent here?
(Actually, I have a guess for that, too, using some extra structure I have availabke, but I can’t show that my guess reproduces the above ordinary pushout construciton.)
Should it be obvious that such a fiber sequence can be continued if G is twice deloopable? Or is this a special characteristic of your situation?
Should it be obvious that such a fiber sequence can be continued if G is twice deloopable? Or is this a special characteristic of your situation?
This is special for my situation.
The fiber sequence that i am considering is that induced by the counit
of the terminal geometric morphism. I am working in an “locally -connected” situation, so that is a right adjoint. As such it preserves looping, and hence I get a fiber sequence
Ok. I think I’m not going to be able to help you without spending a lot more time to understand your situation; sorry.
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