Fiber functor: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 08:55, 13 December 2024
Fiber functors in category theory, topology and algebraic geometry refer to several loosely related functors that generalise the functors taking a covering space to the fiber over a point .
Definition
A fiber functor (or fibre functor) is a loose concept which has multiple definitions depending on the formalism considered. One of the main initial motivations for fiber functors comes from Topos theory.[1] Recall a topos is the category of sheaves over a site. If a site is just a single object, as with a point, then the topos of the point is equivalent to the category of sets,
. If we have the topos of sheaves on a topological space
, denoted
, then to give a point
in
is equivalent to defining adjoint functors
The functor
sends a sheaf
on
to its fiber over the point
; that is, its stalk.[2]
From covering spaces
Consider the category of covering spaces over a topological space
, denoted
. Then, from a point
there is a fiber functor[3]
sending a covering space
to the fiber
. This functor has automorphisms coming from
since the fundamental group acts on covering spaces on a topological space
. In particular, it acts on the set
. In fact, the only automorphisms of
come from
.
With étale topologies
There is an algebraic analogue of covering spaces coming from the étale topology on a connected scheme
. The underlying site consists of finite étale covers, which are finite[4][5] flat surjective morphisms
such that the fiber over every geometric point
is the spectrum of a finite étale
-algebra. For a fixed geometric point
, consider the geometric fiber
and let
be the underlying set of
-points. Then,
is a fiber functor where
is the topos from the finite étale topology on
. In fact, it is a theorem of Grothendieck that the automorphisms of
form a profinite group, denoted
, and induce a continuous group action on these finite fiber sets, giving an equivalence between covers and the finite sets with such actions.
From Tannakian categories
Another class of fiber functors come from cohomological realizations of motives in algebraic geometry. For example, the De Rham cohomology functor sends a motive to its underlying de-Rham cohomology groups .[6]
See also
References
External links
- SGA 4 and SGA 4 IV
- Motivic Galois group - https://web.archive.org/web/20200408142431/https://www.him.uni-bonn.de/fileadmin/him/Lecture_Notes/motivic_Galois_group.pdf
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- ↑ Which is required to ensure the étale map is surjective, otherwise open subschemes of could be included.
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