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Consider the following simplicial set:
is the simplicial set corepresenting the functor:
.
It looks to me that is exactly the nerve of the contractible groupoid on two generators. Am I correct?
Essentially, maps out from this thing classify edges with two-sided inverses, that is to say, equivalences.
I presume that is a simplicial set?
Yes.
I don’t see why that simplicial set is even a quasicategory. There’s another 3-horn or two that I don’t see how to fill.
Hmm… Which one?
It seems off to me too. The -skeleton of the nerve of that groupoid should be a -sphere: these -spheres approximate the infinite-dimensional sphere which is the total space of the classifying bundle for .
Hmm… how are you computing this stuff?
My picture looks like a filled tetrahedron with the following edges:
Three copies of the distinguished edge e (, , and ),
Two degenerate edges ( and ), and
Some other edge
That is, this object classifies 3-cells of that form. That is, given an edge and the composite classifying the edge , the lifts from that thing classify the two-sided inverses of the edge .
Since it’s a quotient of , isn’t it safe to say that it has no nondegenerate cells of dimension higher ?
So I mean, it looks to me like there are:
Two vertices of this object
Two nondegenerate edges: and
Two nondegenerate 2-simplices: and
One nondegenerate 3-simplex tracking associativity
@ Todd
that groupoid
which groupoid is this? And Harry, just checking by “the contractible groupoid on two generators” you mean the codiscrete groupoid with 2 objects?
Sorry for all the peanut-gallery comments. Off to a company lunch soon and there’s no work being done here.
I mean the contractible groupoid with two objects.
I’m saying there should be more nondegenerate 3-simplices tracking associativity. The one you’ve got does associativity for ; what about ? And you need some 4-simplices, and so on. The nerve of the contractible groupoid on 2 objects has nondegenerate k-simplices for every k.
Hmm…
Good point! How should I think of that object then? Is it weakly equivalent (for the Joyal model structure) to the nerve of that groupoid?
At least mapping into a fixed quasicategory, it seems like they’re identical (since we can lift everything on the target).
@David: as Harry said, the category is the chaotic or codiscrete groupoid with two objects. There is a -action on this category which permutes the two objects, and the quotient by this action maps down to the group considered as the one-object groupoid. The (realization of the) nerve of the functor is the classifying bundle.
Intuitively, if the two objects of are and , the chain with edges which runs as is a non-degenerate -simplex which represents the northern hemisphere of a -sphere, and the chain which runs as represents the southern hemisphere. Hence the -skeleton if a -sphere. The union of the -spheres is an infinite-dimensional sphere which is the total space of the classifying bundle for the group .
I think you’re right that they’re Joyal-equivalent; I think I’ve even seen that written down somewhere, but I can’t find it right now. Mapping into a fixed quasicategory would be good enough for that, since a map A→B of simplicial sets is a Joyal-equivalence iff [B,X]→[A,X] is an equivalence for all quasicategories X.
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