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Dave Carchedi observes the following about the topos of sheaves on CartSp:
It is acually a local topos in that the terminal geometric morphism is not only essential, but there is a fourth adjoint ,
where for a set, is the codiscrete smooth structure on in that for we have
where on the right we have the set of maps from the underlying set of the Cartesian space into the set .
Now the observaton is that the unit of this adjunction
sends the set of -plots of into the set of set-maps .
This is noteworthy, because the image-factorization of this map is concretization the map that sends a sheaf to its underlying concrete sheaf: the underlying diffeologial space.
So we are wondering if this points to a nice general abstract way of understanding how the quasi-topos of concrete sheaves sits inside the topos of all sheaves. Is there any good way to speak for a local topos of the image factorization of the unit map of the extra adjunction?
And generally: is there known for quasi-toposes any characterization akin to the characterization of sheaf toposes as accessible exact reflective subcategories of presheaf toposes?
For any topos and any Lawvere-Tierney topology on , the full subcategory of -sheaves is left-exact reflective and a topos, while the full subcategory of -separated objects is reflective and a quasitopos. Moreover, the reflection into can be obtained as the image factorization of the reflection into .
In the case in question, the adjunction forms a geometric morphism , which is in fact a geometric embedding since is fully faithful. Therefore, under the equivalence between subtoposes and Lawvere-Tierney topologies, it corresponds to such a topology on , and your argument shows that the concrete sheaves are the separated objects for this topology.
There are other interesting examples of this sort of situation. For instance, the effective topos admits a geometric morphism from (though in this case does not have a left adjoint) whose right adjoint part produces “codiscrete” objects, and the separated objects for the resulting topology are of importance. So the general situation should be described somewhere, but I’m not sure where.
is there known for quasi-toposes any characterization akin to the characterization of sheaf toposes as accessible exact reflective subcategories of presheaf toposes?
Well, C2.2.13 in the Elephant implies that any Grothendieck quasitopos (= locally small, cocomplete quasitopos with a strong-generating set) is the category of separated objects for some Lawvere-Tierney topology on a presheaf topos. I don’t know a direct characterization of these in terms of properties of the reflector—it preserves finite products and monomorphisms (though not all limits), but I don’t know whether that’s a characterization.
Hey, that’s great. Thanks Mike! That makes me quite happy.
I included some of this now at cohesive topos
I added a bit of this to concrete sheaf.
What is “” meant to stand for?
Mike,
I tried to go through concrete sheaf and beautify it further. I moved part of what you added to the Definitions-section, where I now keep two definitions: first the elementary one over a concrete site, then then more abstract one in any local topos.
I made part of the discussion that you added into a proposition which shows that the more general definition does reduce to the more elementary definition. In the course of this I expanded a bit and ended up re-expressing some of the material you had earlier, to make it fit the new entry design. You should please have a critical look at what I did and see if you can live with this.
The remarks about how it follows that concrete sheaves form a quasitopos I kept in the Properties-section in a formal Proposition-environment that replaces the material which was there previously.
“Ctr” was for the “center” of a local geometric morphism, which is what Johnstone calls the geometric morphism . It’s probably not a particularly great name.
Your improvements look good; I was just too lazy to try to integrate what I wrote with the rest of the article. (-: I added a few remarks to separated presheaf mentioning the generalization to arbitrary toposes.
What is the connection between concrete presheaves and -separated presheaves, in the case where the Grothendieck topology on the site is trivial? Famously, for simplicial sets, the concrete objects are precisely the -separated presheaves.
Here are some hypotheses that make the two notions coincide. Let be a small category.
For example, could be , or could be a small well-pointed elementary topos minus any initial objects. If I’m not mistaken, conditions (1) and (2) ensure that the family of all points of an object in is a covering family in the topology, and condition (3) ensures that the sheaf condition is trivial. Thus, a -separated presheaf on is concrete. On the other hand, -covering families can be recognised by checking surjectivity on points, so concrete presheaves coincide with -separated presheaves.
In fact, writing for the right adjoint of , the conditions appear to ensure that the local operators and coincide. Can we get a complete characterisation of all those for which this happens?
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