SimpSet in nLab
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homotopy theory, (∞,1)-category theory, homotopy type theory
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Definition
The category SimpSetSimpSet, or sSetsSet for short, is the category whose objects are simplicial sets and whose morphisms are simplicial maps.
Equivalently, this is the functor category from the opposite category Δ op\Delta^{op} of the simplex category Δ\Delta to the category of sets:
SimpSet≃[Δ op,Set]. SimpSet \simeq [\Delta^{op}, Set] \,.
Properties
Basic properties
Many basic properties of the category of simplicial sets follow as it being a special case of a category of presheaves over a small category (namely over the simplex category), and hence in particular a Grothendieck topos.
For example, this immediately implies (see here) that and how sSetsSet is complete and cocomplete (with limits and colimits constructed levelwise) and cartesian closed.
In this vein:
Proof
This is the immediate specialization of this Proposition for general presheaves.
Cartesian closed monoidal structure
As described at closed monoidal structure on presheaves the cartesian tensor product S⊗T=S×TS \otimes T = S \times T of simplicial sets SS and TT is the simplicial set
(S⊗T):[n]↦S n×T n, (S \otimes T) : [n] \mapsto S_n \times T_n \,,
where the product on the right is the cartesian product in Set.
One central reason why simplicial sets are useful and important is that this simple monoidal structure (“disturbingly simple minded” in the words of Friedman08, p. 24) actually does fully capture the standard monoidal structure on topological spaces under geometric realization |⋅|:SSet→Top|\cdot| : SSet \to Top
Proposition
For SS and TT simplicial sets, we have
|S×T|≃|S|×|T|, |S \times T| \simeq |S| \times |T| \,,
where on the right the cartesian product is in the nice category of compactly generated Hausdorff spaces.
See also at products of simplices.
As described at closed monoidal structure on presheaves, the internal hom [S,T][S,T] of simplicial sets is the simplicial set
[S,T]:[n]↦Hom SSet(S×Δ[n],T), [S,T] : [n] \mapsto Hom_{SSet}(S \times \Delta[n], T) \,,
where Δ[n]=Hom Δ(−,[n])\Delta[n] = Hom_{\mathbf{\Delta}}(-,[n]) is the standard simplicial nn-simplex, the image of [n]∈Δ[n] \in \mathbf{\Delta} under the Yoneda embedding. This formula is clearly representing a Kan extension.
Adjunctions
The maps N:Cat→SimpSetN: \Cat \rightarrow \Simp\Set and S:Top→SimpSetS: \Top \rightarrow \Simp\Set described in the examples are actually functors, both of which have left adjoints. These adjoint pairs are examples of a very general sort of adjunction involving simplicial sets, of which there are many examples.
Let EE be any cocomplete category and let F:Δ→EF: \Delta \rightarrow E be a functor. We define the right adjoint R:E→SimpSetR : E \rightarrow \Simp\Set as follows. Given an object e∈Ee \in E the nn-simplices of ReRe are defined to be the set E(F[n],e)E(F[n],e) of morphisms in EE from F[n]F[n] to ee. Face and degeneracy maps are given by precomposition by the appropriate (dual) maps in the image of FF. RR is defined on morphisms by postcomposition.
The left adjoint LL is defined to be the left Kan extension of FF along the Yoneda embedding y:Δ→SimpSety: \Delta \rightarrow \Simp\Set. Because the yy is full and faithful, we will have Ly=FLy = F, i.e., L(Δ[n])=F[n]L (\Delta[n]) = F[n]. By specifying FF, we have already defined a functor to EE on the represented simplicial sets; LL is the unique cocontinuous extension of this functor to SimpSet\Simp\Set. It can be described explicitly on objects as a coend, or as a weighted colimit.
(Easy) abstract nonsense shows that LL and RR form an adjoint pair L⊣RL \dashv R.
Here are some examples:
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Let E=CatE = \Cat and FF be the functor [n]↦[n][n] \mapsto [n] (the inclusion of posets into categories). The right adjoint is the nerve functor NN described above. The left adjoint τ 1{\tau}_1 takes a simplicial set to its fundamental category.
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Let E=TopE = \Top and FF be the functor [n]↦Δ n[n] \mapsto {\Delta}_n. The right adjoint is the total singular complex functor SS described above. The left adjoint |−||-| is called geometric realization. As a consequence of the Kan extension construction, the geometric realization of the represented simplicial set Δ[n]\Delta[n] is the standard nn-simplex Δ n{\Delta}^n.
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(Barycentric) subdivision and extension sd:SimpSet↔SimpSet:ex\sd: \Simp\Set \leftrightarrow \Simp\Set :\ex.
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The homotopy coherent nerve functor and its left adjoint SimpSet↔SimpCat\Simp\Set \leftrightarrow \Simp\Cat where SimpCat? denotes the category of simplicially enriched categories, i.e., categories enriched in SimpSet\Simp\Set.
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The adjunction −×X:SimpSet↔SimpSet:(−) X- \times X: \SimpSet \leftrightarrow \SimpSet :(-)^X between the product with a simplicial set XX and the internal-hom, which makes SimpSet\Simp\Set into a cartesian closed category.
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Let EE be a Grothendieck topos equipped with an “interval” II, i.e. a totally ordered object in the internal logic equipped with distinct top and bottom elements. Then we have the functor Δ→E\Delta \to E sending [n][n] to the subobject {(x 1,x 2,…,x n)|x 1≤x 2≤…≤x n}↪I n \{ (x_1,x_2,\dots,x_n) \;|\; x_1 \le x_2 \le \dots \le x_n \} \hookrightarrow I^n which gives rise to a geometric morphism E→SimpSetE\to \SimpSet. Therefore, SimpSet\SimpSet is the classifying topos of such “intervals”.
Model category structures
There are important model category structures on sSetsSet.
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The standard model structure on simplicial sets presents the (∞,1)-category ∞Grpd of ∞-groupoids.
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The model structure for quasi-categories on sSetsSet presents the (∞,2)-category of (∞,1)-categories (∞,1)Cat.
Internal logic
Like any elementary topos, SimpSet\SimpSet has an internal logic. Here we list some properties of this logic.
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It is a two-valued topos, i.e. the only subobjects of 1=Δ 01 = \Delta^0 are 00 and 11. (This is not really a property of the internal logic, but we include it to contrast with the next point.)
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It is not Boolean. In general, the complement of a simplicial subset A⊆BA\subseteq B is the full simplicial subset on the vertices of BB not contained in AA (“full” meaning it contains a simplex of BB as soon as it contains all its vertices). Thus, A∪¬A=BA\cup \neg A = B only if AA is a connected component of BB, i.e. any simplex with at least one vertex in AA lies entirely in AA.
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By Diaconescu's theorem, SimpSet\SimpSet therefore does not satisfy the axiom of choice.
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Like any presheaf topos, it satisfies dependent choice (assuming it holds in the metatheory); see Fourman and Scedrov. Moreover, natural numbers object is simply the discrete simplicial set of ordinary natural numbers.
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Similarly, it satisfies Markov's principle.
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Less obviously, it satisfies the Kreisel-Putnam axiom? that (¬p→(q∨r))=((¬p→q)∨(¬p→r))(\neg p \to (q\vee r)) = ((\neg p \to q) \vee (\neg p \to r)); see this MO question and answers.
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Ho(sSet) (the homotopy category of simplicial sets)
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dSet (category of dendroidal sets)
References
- Michael Fourman and Andrej Ščedrov, The “world’s simplest axiom of choice” fails, manuscripta mathematica 1982, Volume 38, Issue 3, pp 325-332 PDF
Last revised on December 16, 2024 at 09:47:09. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.