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- Newsgroups: sci.math.research
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.cso.uiuc.edu!dan
- From: Allan Adler <ara@zurich.ai.mit.edu>
- Subject: sheaves and espaces etal\'es
- Message-ID: <ARA.92Dec19013035@camelot.ai.mit.edu>
- Originator: dan@symcom.math.uiuc.edu
- Sender: Daniel Grayson <dan@math.uiuc.edu>
- X-Submissions-To: sci-math-research@uiuc.edu
- Organization: M.I.T. Artificial Intelligence Lab.
- X-Administrivia-To: sci-math-research-request@uiuc.edu
- Approved: Daniel Grayson <dan@math.uiuc.edu>
- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 06:30:35 GMT
- Lines: 71
-
-
- I've been wondering about some aspects of the theory of sheaves on a
- topological space and more generally on a site. In the case of
- sheaves on a topological space X, there are two approaches to the
- study of sheaves:
- (1) view a sheaf as a special kind of presheaf, a presheaf being a
- contravariant functor from the topology to the category of sets.
- (2) view a sheaf as a local homeomorphism from a space Y to X. The space
- Y is called an espace etal\'e over X.
-
- To go from (1) to (2), let F be the sheaf and consider the disjoint union
- of all of the spaces U x F(U), where U runs over all of the
- open subsets of X and where F(U) is given the discrete topology. Then
- form the quotient space of this disjoint union with respect to the
- equivalence relation generated by identifying points of V x F(U)
- with their images in V x F(V) whenever V is an open subset of U.
- On the other hand, given an espace etal\'e Y over X, the associated
- functor associates to each open subset U of X the set of continuous
- sections of Y over U.
-
- Thus these notions are equivalent. The functorial approach in (1) is
- in many ways preferable, it seems, because it generalizes to the setting
- of sheaves on sites (i.e. on categories with Grothendieck topologies).
- On the other hand, the espace etale has the advantage of concreteness.
-
- If one gets down to specific advantages, the following come immediately
- to mind:
- (i) it is very convenient to form the inverse image sheaf using the espace
- etal\'e approach: if X'--> X is a continous function and if Y is an
- espace etal\'e over X, then the inverse image sheaf on X' arises from
- the espace etal\'e on X' which is the fibre product of X' and Y over X.
- The inverse image sheaf regarded as a functor is much more complicated,
- being defined as the sheaf associated to a presheaf defined using
- direct limits.
-
- (ii) For the direct image sheaf, on the other hand, it seems that it is
- more convenient to use the functorial approach: if f:X' --> X is
- continuous and F is a sheaf on X', then the direct image sheaf is simply
- the composition of the sheaf on X' with the functor from the topology
- of X to the topology of X' induced by f. That is conceptually quite
- simple, whereas I am not aware of a direct topological construction
- of the espace etal\'e on X associated to this sheaf (if you are aware
- of one, please let me know).
-
- This suggests that it is desirable to keep both of these approaches
- available and to be able to carry out constructions using either one.
- If that is the case, then it is also natural to ask whether the
- espace etal\'e can be generalized to the setting of Grothendieck
- topologies. Note that the construction of the espace etal\'e for
- a sheaf on a topological space (i.e. (1) => (2)) was carried
- out entirely in the setting of topological spaces and the sheaf
- was concretely realized as a topological space over X using only
- topological constructions. It is natural then to wonder whether,
- given a sheaf F on a site E, there is a natural construction of a
- site E' and a morphism of sites E' --> E which generalizes the
- construction of an espace etal\'e, the sheaf being recovered as some
- kind of sheaf of sections. I think that if one works with Grothendieck
- topological spaces (i.e. sets equipped with a Grothendieck topology of subsets,
- one can also get
- an espace etal\'e (with a Grothendieck topology of subsets) by the
- same construction, but I haven't really checked it. So that tends to
- support the idea of a general construction with sites.
-
- If you know how to do this for sites in general, please let me know. I have
- had some interesting and imaginative suggestions from some people I have
- asked privately, but I have not seen a complete solution.
-
- Allan Adler
- ara@altdorf.ai.mit.edu
-
-
-