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Cross-posted from MO. Feel free to put any answers there to pointy-licious goodness
I’m working out of Sheaves in geometry and logic, for reference.
There is a characterisation of flat functors as those such that the Grothendieck construction is a filtering category. There are more general versions of this result, in which is replaced by a more general topos. One should also be able to characterise those discrete opfibrations that arise from flat functors (up to iso/equiv?). How about if we replace by an internal category, in a topos say? Then functors out of are replaced by discrete opfibrations over in .
My question is this:
What sort of thing should be considered as the analogue of a flat functor in the internal setting?
I’ve mumbled something in response over at MO.
Thanks, Finn. I’ve accepted your answer.
Cool, hope it helped.
It did, but google books doesn’t give me any joy with either of Johnstone’s books, nor the handbook of categorical algebra.
Could you pretty please copy out the axioms?
From Elephant B2.6.1 (slightly shortened):
We begin by defining a number of objects associated with an internal category .
- , the object of pairs of morphisms with common codomain, is defined as the pullback .
- , the object of pairs with common domain, is .
- , the object of parallel pairs, is the intersection of and , or equivalently the pullback .
- , the object of commutative squares, is .
- , the object of diagrams of type with , is .
These are all defined with diagrams which I hope you can write down for yourself, perhaps by my subscript notation. The pulled back maps in these pullbacks are all given by lowercase letters that match the uppercase letter that names the pullback itself. For example, , , and is universal with this structure. The structure maps themselves are as usual.
From Elephant B2.6.2:
An internal category in a regular category is filtered if each of the three morphisms , , and is a cover.
Note: in this definition we have adopted the custom of naming morhpisms into a pullback by the names of the morphisms into the product of which the pullback is a subobject.
Er, yes. What Toby said.
For one whose interests incline in that direction, it would be a nice exercise to work out those axioms by starting with the usual definition of a flat functor and interpreting it in the internal logic of the topos.
Thanks. Just what I needed. Well, maybe - it is a minor distraction perhaps from the real task - internal saturated anafunctors :)
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