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Let be an -site and let be a morphism of presheaves on . I believe it is true that the morphism of associated sheaves is an effective epimorphism iff is “section-wise locally surjective”, i.e. for any section there exists a covering such that the restrictions lift to sections . (Does anyone know the reference in HTT for this, by the way?) (Edit: it follows from 7.2.1.14 in HTT.)
If and are 0-truncated, then is a local isomorphism iff the morphism of associated sheaves is 0-connected, i.e. it and its diagonal are effective epimorphisms (because then is automatically 0-truncated). This is easy to check because I can use the above section-wise condition.
If and are not 0-truncated, is there a simple condition that can be checked to ensure that the morphism of associated sheaves is 0-truncated, something along the lines of the diagonal of being “section-wise locally injective”?
This sounds like it would be a fun exercise to work out in the internal HoTT.
The only simple condition I can think of is that is already a monomorphism of presheaves. Of course, this is only sufficient and not necessary.
With the usual indexing, being a monomorphism means being -truncated. Is the question about -truncatedness or 0-truncatedness?
It seems to me that, in this situation, 0-truncatedness implies (-1)-truncatedness. The point being that, for 0-truncated morphisms, the (relative) diagonal is automatically a (-1)-truncated, hence is an isomorphism if and only if it is an effective epimorphism.
In order to prove is a local isomorphism, I only need 0-truncatedness, given that is 0-connected. This is equivalent to the diagonal of being (-1)-truncated, so a sufficient condition for that would already be useful.
(Of course, I’m assuming that admits the relevant limits.)
If you know that the sheafification of is hypercomplete, then it’s -truncated iff has the local right lifting property with respect to for . In general I don’t see how to characterize -truncatedness in such a way.
Marc: hypercompletion for a morphism means that it is a local equivalence with respect to the class of infinity-connected morphisms?
Can you state the exact situation and the question again? I am very confused. What are you assuming about the morphism and what do you want to prove?
Adeel: No, I mean it’s a hypercomplete object in the slice topos. In that case n-truncatedness can be checked by the vanishing of homotopy sheaves (in the slice topos), which I think amounts to what I wrote.
In general -truncatedness is equivalent to the RLP with respect to -connected morphisms of presheaves, but that’s not very explicit.
Mike: basically, I have a morphism of presheaves on an -site which I want to prove is an isomorphism after sheafification. I can prove its sheafification is 0-connected by using the section-wise condition I mentioned. So it remains to show that its sheafification is 0-truncated, and I was wondering whether there was a section-wise condition on that I could use to check this.
Marc: I see, thanks. I’m not sure at the moment whether this applies in my situation, I’ll have to check (I don’t have a good intuition for hypercomplete objects).
I see. Any particular reason you chose ? It’s equally true that you could prove its sheafification is -connected using a section-wise condition and then wonder about -truncatedness, for any .
The only fully general way I can think of to show that a map has an -truncated sheafification is to show that the -fold iterated diagonal of itself is a local equivalence. But that probably doesn’t help you a whole lot.
Sure, that is true.
Now I’ve managed to confuse myself on something really silly. Let be an arbitrary morphism of presheaves and consider the diagonal . is a monomorphism iff is a monomorphism of infinity-groupoids for each object . Let be an object and let be a point in the target, corresponding to points and such that . If the fibre at is nonempty, let be a point in it, which is by definition a point of such that . Then it is clear that the point is unique, hence every fibre of is empty or contractible, hence is a monomorphism for all , hence is a monomorphism.
Where am I implicitly using that and are discrete here?
The point may not be unique. For instance, take for a discrete group (with , say). The diagonal is . The fiber over the base point is the set of orbits .
Ah right, thanks.
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