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I was looking around a little for natural examples of Hopf ring spectra discussed in the literature. In Strickland-Turner 97 is discussed Hopf (semi-)(co-)ring structure on the extended power spectrum of the sphere spectrum, which they write .
Now the extended power spectrum of any spectrum , that’s the direct sum over of the homotopy quotients of the -fold smash powers of by the canonical symmetric group action
I suppose this may be thought of as the spectral analog of the symmetric algebra construction where for a -vector space we form . (If is of char 0 then we may form this from the tensor algebra by quotienting out the symmetric group action.) The analog of the ground field is now the sphere spectrum.
This should be the intuitive explanation of why there may be Hopf-like structure on these extended power spectra: They are like rings of functions on affine lines, and hence the additive group structure of the affine line induces a coproduct on its ring of functions. If I understand well, this matches with what Strickland-Turner have, where the coproduct (later ) is induced from the diagonal (towards the bottom of p. 2).
Interestingly now, while the ordinary symmetric algebra of the ground ring itself is trivial, the extended power spectrum of the sphere spectrum itself is nontrivial. This is because but hence the homotopy quotient by contributes a copy of at each stage.
That makes me want to say that the in Strickland-Turner is usefully thought of as the “polynomial ring” being like functions on the “absolute spectral affine line”. Or something like this. Does this make sense?
Yes, is the free -algebra on one generator (Lurie writes this as , where denotes the sphere spectrum), aka the symmetric algebra , and it is indeed the ring of functions on the absolute spectral affine line (which I think Lurie writes as ). It should probably be distinguished from the polynomial ring though (which is the ring of functions on the “flat affine line”, which I think Lurie writes as ; this guy base changes over to the usual affine line).
More generally one can take for any connective -module . Even when is non-connective there is a non-schematic spectral stack associated to , which is a spectral Artin stack when is perfect. Its infinitesimal theory is as “simple” as (the tor-amplitude of) is (for example if is of tor-amplitude , aka locally free (without shifts) then is just a vector bundle).
the absolute spectral affine line (which I think Lurie writes as ).
Where?
It looks like Lurie only discusses the projective versions so far (5.4 and 19.2.6 in SAG). Presumably discussion of the affine versions will also be added at some point, but who knows. Have you seen his new paper Elliptic Cohomology I, though? That might have what you’re looking for, see especially Example 3.5.4.
Okay, thanks.
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