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**topos theory

Context

Topos Theory

topos theory

Background

Toposes

Internal Logic

Topos morphisms

Extra stuff, structure, properties

Cohomology and homotopy

In higher category theory

Theorems

Topology

topology (point-set topology, point-free topology)

see also differential topology, algebraic topology, functional analysis and topological homotopy theory

Introduction

Basic concepts

Universal constructions

Extra stuff, structure, properties

Examples

Basic statements

Theorems

Analysis Theorems

topological homotopy theory

** *Toposes ## Background * category theory * category * functor ## Toposes ## * (0,1)-topos, Heyting algebra, locale * pretopos * topos * Grothendieck topos * category of presheaves * presheaf * representable presheaf * category of sheaves * site * sieve * coverage, pretopology, topology * sheaf * sheafification * quasitopos * base topos, indexed topos ## Internal Logic * categorical semantics * internal logic * subobject classifier * natural numbers object ## Topos morphisms * logical morphism * geometric morphism * direct image/inverse image * global sections * geometric embedding * surjective geometric morphism * essential geometric morphism * locally connected geometric morphism * connected geometric morphism * totally connected geometric morphism * étale geometric morphism * open geometric morphism * proper geometric morphism, compact topos * separated geometric morphism, Hausdorff topos * local geometric morphism * bounded geometric morphism * base change * localic geometric morphism * hyperconnected geometric morphism * atomic geometric morphism ## Extra stuff, structure, properties * topological locale * localic topos * petit topos/gros topos * locally connected topos, connected topos, totally connected topos, strongly connected topos * local topos * cohesive topos * classifying topos * smooth topos ## Cohomology and homotopy * cohomology * homotopy * abelian sheaf cohomology * model structure on simplicial presheaves ## In higher category theory * higher topos theory * (0,1)-topos * (0,1)-site * 2-topos * 2-site * 2-sheaf, stack * (∞,1)-topos * (∞,1)-site * (∞,1)-sheaf, ∞-stack, derived stack ## Theorems * Diaconescu's theorem * Barr's theorem *** **topology** (point-set topology, point-free topology) see also _differential topology_, _algebraic topology_, _functional analysis_ and _topological homotopy theory_ Introduction **Basic concepts** * open subset, closed subset, neighbourhood * topological space, locale * base for the topology, neighbourhood base * finer/coarser topology * closure, interior, boundary * separation, sobriety * continuous function, homeomorphism * uniformly continuous function * embedding * open map, closed map * sequence, net, sub-net, filter * convergence * category Top * convenient category of topological spaces **[Universal constructions](Top#UniversalConstructions)** * initial topology, final topology * subspace, quotient space, * fiber space, space attachment * product space, disjoint union space * mapping cylinder, mapping cocylinder * mapping cone, mapping cocone * mapping telescope * colimits of normal spaces **Extra stuff, structure, properties** * nice topological space * metric space, metric topology, metrisable space * Kolmogorov space, Hausdorff space, regular space, normal space * sober space * compact space, proper map sequentially compact, countably compact, locally compact, sigma-compact, paracompact, countably paracompact, strongly compact * compactly generated space * second-countable space, first-countable space * contractible space, locally contractible space * connected space, locally connected space * simply-connected space, locally simply-connected space * cell complex, CW-complex * pointed space * topological vector space, Banach space, Hilbert space * topological group * topological vector bundle, topological K-theory * topological manifold **Examples** * empty space, point space * discrete space, codiscrete space * Sierpinski space * order topology, specialization topology, Scott topology * Euclidean space * real line, plane * cylinder, cone * sphere, ball * circle, torus, annulus, Moebius strip * polytope, polyhedron * projective space (real, complex) * classifying space * configuration space * path, loop * mapping spaces: compact-open topology, topology of uniform convergence * loop space, path space * Zariski topology * Cantor space, Mandelbrot space * Peano curve * line with two origins, long line, Sorgenfrey line * K-topology, Dowker space * Warsaw circle, Hawaiian earring space **Basic statements** * Hausdorff spaces are sober * schemes are sober * continuous images of compact spaces are compact * closed subspaces of compact Hausdorff spaces are equivalently compact subspaces * open subspaces of compact Hausdorff spaces are locally compact * quotient projections out of compact Hausdorff spaces are closed precisely if the codomain is Hausdorff * compact spaces equivalently have converging subnet of every net * Lebesgue number lemma * sequentially compact metric spaces are equivalently compact metric spaces * compact spaces equivalently have converging subnet of every net * sequentially compact metric spaces are totally bounded * continuous metric space valued function on compact metric space is uniformly continuous * paracompact Hausdorff spaces are normal * paracompact Hausdorff spaces equivalently admit subordinate partitions of unity * closed injections are embeddings * proper maps to locally compact spaces are closed * injective proper maps to locally compact spaces are equivalently the closed embeddings * locally compact and sigma-compact spaces are paracompact * locally compact and second-countable spaces are sigma-compact * second-countable regular spaces are paracompact * CW-complexes are paracompact Hausdorff spaces **Theorems** * Urysohn's lemma * Tietze extension theorem * Tychonoff theorem * tube lemma * Michael's theorem * Brouwer's fixed point theorem * topological invariance of dimension * Jordan curve theorem **Analysis Theorems** * Heine-Borel theorem * intermediate value theorem * extreme value theorem **topological homotopy theory** * left homotopy, right homotopy * homotopy equivalence, deformation retract * fundamental group, covering space * fundamental theorem of covering spaces * homotopy group * weak homotopy equivalence * Whitehead's theorem * Freudenthal suspension theorem * nerve theorem * homotopy extension property, Hurewicz cofibration * cofiber sequence * Strøm model category * classical model structure on topological spaces

Contents

Idea and motivation

A locale is, intuitively, like a topological space that may or may not have enough points (or even any points at all). It contains things we call “open sets” but there may or may not be enough points to distinguish between open sets. An “open set” in a locale can be regarded as conveying a bounded amount of information about the (hypothetical) points that it contains. For example, there is a locale of all surjections from the natural numbers NN to the real numbers RR. It has no points, since there are no such surjections, but it contains many nontrivial “open sets;” these open sets are generated by a family parametrised by n:Nn: N and x:Rx: R that may be described as {f:NR|f\{f:N\to R | f is a surjection and f(n)=x}f(n) = x\}.

Every topological space can be regarded as a locale (with a little bit of lost information if the space is not sober). Conversely, every locale induces a topology on its set of points, but sometimes a great deal of information is lost; there are many different locales whose space of points is empty. We say that a locale is spatial if it can be recovered from its space of points.

One motivation for locales is that since they take the notion of “open set” as basic, with the points (if any) being a derived notion, they are exactly what is needed to define sheaves. The notion of sheaf on a topological space only refers to the open sets, rather than the points, so it carries over word-for-word to a definition of sheaves on locales. Moreover, passage from locales to their toposes of sheaves is a full and faithful functor, unlike for topological spaces.

Another advantage of locales is that they are better-behaved than topological spaces in constructive mathematics or internal to an arbitrary topos. For example, constructively the topological space [0,1][0,1] need not be compact, but the locale [0,1][0,1] is always compact (in a suitable sense). It follows that the locale [0,1][0,1], and hence also the locale RR of real numbers, is not always spatial. When it fails to be spatial, because there are “not enough real numbers,” the locale is generally a better-behaved object than the topological space of real numbers.

Definition

A frame AA is a poset with all joins and all finite meets which satisfies the infinite distributive law:

x( iy i)= i(xy i). x \wedge (\bigvee_i y_i) = \bigvee_i (x\wedge y_i).

A frame homomorphism ϕ:AB\phi: A\to B is a function which preserves finite meets and arbitrary joins. Frames and frame homomorphisms form a category Frm.

Note: By the adjoint functor theorem (AFT) for posets, a frame also has all meets, but a frame homomorphism need not preserve them. Again by the AFT, a frame is automatically a Heyting algebra, but again a frame homomorphism need not preserve the Heyting implication.

The category Loc of locales is the opposite of the category of frames. That is, a locale XX “is” a frame, which we often write as O(X)O(X) and call “the frame of open sets in XX”, and a continuous map f:XYf:X\to Y of locales is a frame homomorphism f *:O(Y)O(X)f^*:O(Y)\to O(X). If you think of a frame as an algebraic structure (a lattice satisfying a completeness condition), then this is an example of the duality of space and quantity.

Relation to topological spaces

Every topological space XX has a frame of open sets O(X)O(X), and therefore gives rise to a locale X lX_l. For every continuous function f:XYf:X\to Y between spaces, the inverse image map f 1:O(Y)O(X)f^{-1}:O(Y)\to O(X) is a frame homomorphism, so ff induces a continuous map f l:X lY lf_l:X_l\to Y_l of locales. Thus we have a functor () l:TopLoc(-)_l:Top \to Loc.

Conversely, if XX is any locale, we define a point of XX to be a continuous map 1X1\to X. Here 11 is the terminal locale, which can be defined as the locale 1 l1_l corresponding to the terminal space. Explicitly, we have O(1)=P(1)O(1) = P(1), the powerset of 11 (the initial frame, the set of truth values, which is 2 classically or in a Boolean topos). Since a frame homomorphism O(X)P(1)O(X)\to P(1) is determined by the preimage of 11, a point can also be described more explicitly as a completely prime filter: an upwards-closed subset FF of O(X)O(X) such that XFX\in F (XX denotes the top element of O(X)O(X)), if U,VFU,V\in F then UVFU\cap V\in F, and if iU iF\bigcup_i U_i\in F then U iFU_i\in F for some ii.

The elements of O(X)O(X) induce a topology on the set of points of XX in an obvious way, thereby giving rise to a topological space X pX_p. Any continuous map f:XYf:X\to Y of locales induces a continuous map f p:X pY pf_p:X_p\to Y_p of spaces, so we have another functor () P:LocTop(-)_P:Loc\to Top.

It is not hard to check that () l(-)_l is left adjoint to () p(-)_p. In fact, this is an idempotent adjunction, and therefore it restricts to an equivalence between the fixed subcategories on either side. A space with XX lpX\cong X_{lp} is called sober, while a locale with XX plX\cong X_{pl} is called spatial.

In the context of (n,r)(n,r)-topos theory

Recall the definition of (n,r)-category in general and of (0,1)-category in particular.

It turns out that a (0,1)-topos is essentially the same as a Heyting algebra, and a Grothendieck (0,1)(0,1)-topos is a locale.

Examples

References

An introduction to and survey of the use of locales instead of topological spaces is

This is, in its own words, to be read as the trailer for the book

that develops, among other things, much of standard topology entirely with the notion of locale used in place of that of topological spaces. See Stone Spaces for details.

See also part C (volume 2) of

Revision on December 28, 2010 at 13:19:07 by Urs Schreiber See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.