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this must be some general abstract fact and I am just being ignorant:
Consider a topos and a map all whose fibers are tiny objects. Then does the base change (dependent product) preserve colimits?
What do you mean by “fibres are tiny objects”? My definition would be “ is a tiny object in ”. After all, a general topos does not have enough points.
Right, so I should be more concrete. Take the Cahiers topos, consider the monad which is right adjoint to the comonad which is left Kan extension along the functor that contracts away infinitesimal thickening. Then does dependent product along the units of preserve colimits?
In what sense are “the fibers” of those maps tiny?
The fiber of over a point is the infinitesimal disk around in .
Don’t want to derail this with my current obsession, but in view of #4, where at arithmetic jet space there is
… the -formal neighbourhood of any arithmetic scheme around a global point is the space of lifts
this means there should be an such that fiber of is equal to that space of lifts? And that is Buium’s from p.4 here?
Then I should also be thinking about Borger’s .
@Urs
I’m not really familiar with the Cahiers topos, but are those infinitesimal discs really tiny objects? My impression is that they are not representable sheaves (but perhaps rather ind-representable), which seems like an obstacle to being tiny.
@Zhen Lin: true, if we allow infinitesimals of arbitrary order, then those infinitesimal disks are genuine formal disks. I am happy to restrict attention to the case where we use only infinitesimals up to any fixed finite order and consider the unit of .
@David, yes, this is precisely the incarnation of the formal disk in this arithmetic context, the one around the point in .
Ok, well, as Zhen suggested in #2, we should probably expect to need a more internal notion of “tiny fibers” rather than just looking at the global points.
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