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I should know this, but now I am getting mixed up, so I'll ask, at the risk of just making a fool of myself:
how do I see whether the transfinite composition of some weak equivalences is again a weak equivalence?
I came across the statement by somebody that SSet has the advantage over Top that weak equivalences are closed under transfinite composition. Then I tried to think about this and found that I got myself mixed up....
I don't know any universal answer.
thanks, that makes me feel better ;-)
but is that right about WEs in SSet being and in Top not being closed under transcomp? what would be a reference?
I don't recall right now, but it seems plausible, since WEs in sSet are determined by a "finite amount of data".
Thanks, Mike, this is already helpful.
Yes, it's certainly not true that WEs in a general model category are closed under transfinite composition. But it is true sometimes, for instance it's certainly true for WEs in the canonical model structure on Cat.
What are some interesting examples of model categories whose weak equivalences are not closed under transfinite compositions?
Is the standard model structure on spaces interesting enough?
If so, let s be contractible neighbourhoods of in whose intersection is just and let be a weak equivalence collapsing the complement of to and fixing . Then the colimit of s is a connected two-point space so it is contractible.
Indeed; one more reason to use simplicial sets instead of topological spaces…
Now I wonder if there are any interesting combinatorial examples…
If your class of morphisms is closed under filtered colimits, then it is also closed under transfinite composition. In the case of combinatorial model categories, a sufficient condition for the class of weak equivalences to be closed under filtered colimits is the existence of a set of generating cofibrations and a set of generating trivial cofibrations such that the domains and codomains of these are finitely presentable.
So, if I had to guess, perhaps a combinatorial presentation of a non-hypercomplete -topos (on a non-finitary site) would be an example of what you are looking for.
@ZhenLin: I’m confused now, I thought that any left Bousfield localization of simplicial presheaves automatically has weak equivalences closed under transfinite compositions.
Indeed, consider a transfinite sequence X of weak equivalences in a left Bousfield localization of sPSh(C). Choose a cofibrant replacement q: QX→X in the projective model structure on transfinite sequences. The transition maps of QX are acyclic cofibrations in the left Bousfield localization. Acyclic cofibrations are weakly saturated, so the transfinite composition of QX is a weak equivalence.
It remains to see that the transfinite composition of QX is weakly equivalent to the transfinite composition of X. This amounts to showing that the filtered colimit of q_n is a weak equivalence. However, the individual components q_n are acyclic fibrations in the left Bousfield localization, and acyclic fibrations don’t change under left Bousfield localizations, so q_n are componentwise acyclic fibrations of simplicial presheaves, and weak equivalences of simplicial sets are closed under filtered colimits.
Huh. Interesting. That argument works in any combinatorial model category in which the trivial fibrations are closed under filtered colimits. So that rules out a lot of Cisinski model categories.
@ZhenLin: Yes, and more generally, using the same argument, weak equivalences are closed under transfinite compositions whenever maps with a right lifting property with respect to all cofibrations between compact objects are weak equivalences. (Note that this is weaker than saying that such cofibrations generate all cofibrations.)
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