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.
For the sake of illustration I have added to ordinary homology a section In terms of higher linear algebra.
Currently the main point is to record, after some preliminaries, the standard observation plus detailed proof that for a topological space, its ordinary chain complex of singular simplices is, up to equivalence, the -colimit of the tensor unit local system with coefficients in . (Its “-Thom spectrum”.)
added to In terms of higher linear algebra now also the statement that for a Poincaré duality space the -module of sections of the trivial --bundle over it is self-dual, up to a degree twist.
Why is this colimit functor called ? Usually refers to a space of sections, which I would think would be rather the limit that computes cohomology rather than homology. What is a “flat section”?
A functor is a flat -module bundle on . A non-flat one would be a morphism where now on the right we have the actual stack of -modules instead of just the -category of -modules (over the point).
For the tensor unit of -module bundles, a section of is a map . This is flat in the first case, and not-necessarily flat in the second.
By the universal colimit property, a map of -modules is equivalently a map of flat -modle bundles . This is a cosection. Hence is such that maps out of it are cosections, and hence to the extent that all is dualizable itself it is sections. But maybe another term would be better, I am not sure.
1 to 4 of 4