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.
Created:
The category of Beck modules over a C^∞-ring is equivalent to the category of ordinary modules over the underlying real algebra of .
This is established using the proof given at Beck module for ordinary rings, using the fact that ideals of C^∞-rings coincide with ideals in the ordinary sense and the square zero extension construction used there can be promoted to a C^∞-ring using Taylor expansions.
Furthermore, the resulting notion of a Beck derivation coincides with that of a C^∞-derivation.
A different, nonequivalent definition was proposed by Kainz–Kriegl–Michor in 1987.
Suppose is a commutative ring. Denote by the following category. Objects are -modules. Morphisms are polynomial maps , i.e., elements of .
A commutative algebra can be identified with a product-preserving functor , where is the full subcategory of on finitely generated free modules. The value for can be thought of as the space of regular functions , where is the Zariski spectrum of .
The starting observation is that a module over a commutative -algebra can be identified with a dinatural transformation (dinatural in )
We require to be linear in the first argument.
That is to say, to specify an -module , we have to single out polynomial maps , together with a way to compose a polynomial map with a regular function , obtaining a regular map . Interpreting as the module of sections of a quasicoherent sheaf over , a regular map can be restricted to the diagonal , obtaining an element of as required.
The proposal of Kainz–Kriegl–Michor is then to replace polynomial maps with smooth maps:
A C^∞-module over a C^∞-ring is a Hausdorff locally convex topological vector space together with a dinatural transformation
that is linear in the first argument. If is also continuous in the first argument, we say that is a continuous C^∞-module.
Topological vector spaces in the above definition can be replaced by any notion of a vector space that allows for smooth maps, e.g., convenient vector space etc.
1 to 4 of 4