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Injective sheaf

In mathematics, injective sheaves of abelian groups are used to construct the resolutions needed to define sheaf cohomology (and other derived functors, such as sheaf Ext).

There is a further group of related concepts applied to sheaves: flabby (flasque in French), fine, soft (mou in French), acyclic. In the history of the subject they were introduced before the 1957 "Tohoku paper" of Alexander Grothendieck, which showed that the abelian category notion of injective object sufficed to found the theory. The other classes of sheaves are historically older notions. The abstract framework for defining cohomology and derived functors does not need them. However, in most concrete situations, resolutions by acyclic sheaves are often easier to construct. Acyclic sheaves therefore serve for computational purposes, for example the Leray spectral sequence.

Injective sheaves edit

An injective sheaf   is a sheaf that is an injective object of the category of abelian sheaves; in other words, homomorphisms from   to   can always be extended to any sheaf   containing  

The category of abelian sheaves has enough injective objects: this means that any sheaf is a subsheaf of an injective sheaf. This result of Grothendieck follows from the existence of a generator of the category (it can be written down explicitly, and is related to the subobject classifier). This is enough to show that right derived functors of any left exact functor exist and are unique up to canonical isomorphism.

For technical purposes, injective sheaves are usually superior to the other classes of sheaves mentioned above: they can do almost anything the other classes can do, and their theory is simpler and more general. In fact, injective sheaves are flabby (flasque), soft, and acyclic. However, there are situations where the other classes of sheaves occur naturally, and this is especially true in concrete computational situations.

The dual concept, projective sheaves, is not used much, because in a general category of sheaves there are not enough of them: not every sheaf is the quotient of a projective sheaf, and in particular projective resolutions do not always exist. This is the case, for example, when looking at the category of sheaves on projective space in the Zariski topology. This causes problems when attempting to define left derived functors of a right exact functor (such as Tor). This can sometimes be done by ad hoc means: for example, the left derived functors of Tor can be defined using a flat resolution rather than a projective one, but it takes some work to show that this is independent of the resolution. Not all categories of sheaves run into this problem; for instance, the category of sheaves on an affine scheme contains enough projectives.

Acyclic sheaves edit

An acyclic sheaf   over X is one such that all higher sheaf cohomology groups vanish.

The cohomology groups of any sheaf can be calculated from any acyclic resolution of it (this goes by the name of De Rham-Weil theorem).

Fine sheaves edit

A fine sheaf over X is one with "partitions of unity"; more precisely for any open cover of the space X we can find a family of homomorphisms from the sheaf to itself with sum 1 such that each homomorphism is 0 outside some element of the open cover.

Fine sheaves are usually only used over paracompact Hausdorff spaces X. Typical examples are the sheaf of germs of continuous real-valued functions over such a space, or smooth functions over a smooth (paracompact Hausdorff) manifold, or modules over these sheaves of rings. Also, fine sheaves over paracompact Hausdorff spaces are soft and acyclic.

One can find a resolution of a sheaf on a smooth manifold by fine sheaves using the Alexander–Spanier resolution.[1]

As an application, consider a real manifold X. There is the following resolution of the constant sheaf   by the fine sheaves of (smooth) differential forms:

 

This is a resolution, i.e. an exact complex of sheaves by the Poincaré lemma. The cohomology of X with values in   can thus be computed as the cohomology of the complex of globally defined differential forms:

 

Soft sheaves edit

A soft sheaf   over X is one such that any section over any closed subset of X can be extended to a global section.

Soft sheaves are acyclic over paracompact Hausdorff spaces.

Flasque or flabby sheaves edit

A flasque sheaf (also called a flabby sheaf) is a sheaf   with the following property: if   is the base topological space on which the sheaf is defined and

 

are open subsets, then the restriction map

 

is surjective, as a map of groups (rings, modules, etc.).

Flasque sheaves are useful because (by definition) their sections extend. This means that they are some of the simplest sheaves to handle in terms of homological algebra. Any sheaf has a canonical embedding into the flasque sheaf of all possibly discontinuous sections of the étalé space, and by repeating this we can find a canonical flasque resolution for any sheaf. Flasque resolutions, that is, resolutions by means of flasque sheaves, are one approach to defining sheaf cohomology.

Flasque sheaves are soft and acyclic.

Flasque is a French word that has sometimes been translated into English as flabby.

References edit

  1. ^ Warner, Frank W. (1983). Foundations of Differentiable Manifolds and Lie Groups - Springer. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 94. pp. 186, 181, 178, 170. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-1799-0. ISBN 978-1-4419-2820-7.

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In mathematics injective sheaves of abelian groups are used to construct the resolutions needed to define sheaf cohomology and other derived functors such as sheaf Ext There is a further group of related concepts applied to sheaves flabby flasque in French fine soft mou in French acyclic In the history of the subject they were introduced before the 1957 Tohoku paper of Alexander Grothendieck which showed that the abelian category notion of injective object sufficed to found the theory The other classes of sheaves are historically older notions The abstract framework for defining cohomology and derived functors does not need them However in most concrete situations resolutions by acyclic sheaves are often easier to construct Acyclic sheaves therefore serve for computational purposes for example the Leray spectral sequence Contents 1 Injective sheaves 2 Acyclic sheaves 3 Fine sheaves 4 Soft sheaves 5 Flasque or flabby sheaves 6 ReferencesInjective sheaves editAn injective sheaf F displaystyle mathcal F nbsp is a sheaf that is an injective object of the category of abelian sheaves in other words homomorphisms from A displaystyle mathcal A nbsp to F displaystyle mathcal F nbsp can always be extended to any sheaf B displaystyle mathcal B nbsp containing A displaystyle mathcal A nbsp The category of abelian sheaves has enough injective objects this means that any sheaf is a subsheaf of an injective sheaf This result of Grothendieck follows from the existence of a generator of the category it can be written down explicitly and is related to the subobject classifier This is enough to show that right derived functors of any left exact functor exist and are unique up to canonical isomorphism For technical purposes injective sheaves are usually superior to the other classes of sheaves mentioned above they can do almost anything the other classes can do and their theory is simpler and more general In fact injective sheaves are flabby flasque soft and acyclic However there are situations where the other classes of sheaves occur naturally and this is especially true in concrete computational situations The dual concept projective sheaves is not used much because in a general category of sheaves there are not enough of them not every sheaf is the quotient of a projective sheaf and in particular projective resolutions do not always exist This is the case for example when looking at the category of sheaves on projective space in the Zariski topology This causes problems when attempting to define left derived functors of a right exact functor such as Tor This can sometimes be done by ad hoc means for example the left derived functors of Tor can be defined using a flat resolution rather than a projective one but it takes some work to show that this is independent of the resolution Not all categories of sheaves run into this problem for instance the category of sheaves on an affine scheme contains enough projectives Acyclic sheaves editAn acyclic sheaf F displaystyle mathcal F nbsp over X is one such that all higher sheaf cohomology groups vanish The cohomology groups of any sheaf can be calculated from any acyclic resolution of it this goes by the name of De Rham Weil theorem Fine sheaves editA fine sheaf over X is one with partitions of unity more precisely for any open cover of the space X we can find a family of homomorphisms from the sheaf to itself with sum 1 such that each homomorphism is 0 outside some element of the open cover Fine sheaves are usually only used over paracompact Hausdorff spaces X Typical examples are the sheaf of germs of continuous real valued functions over such a space or smooth functions over a smooth paracompact Hausdorff manifold or modules over these sheaves of rings Also fine sheaves over paracompact Hausdorff spaces are soft and acyclic One can find a resolution of a sheaf on a smooth manifold by fine sheaves using the Alexander Spanier resolution 1 As an application consider a real manifold X There is the following resolution of the constant sheaf R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp by the fine sheaves of smooth differential forms 0 R C X 0 C X 1 C X dim X 0 displaystyle 0 to mathbb R to C X 0 to C X 1 to cdots to C X dim X to 0 nbsp This is a resolution i e an exact complex of sheaves by the Poincare lemma The cohomology of X with values in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp can thus be computed as the cohomology of the complex of globally defined differential forms H i X R H i C X X displaystyle H i X mathbb R H i C X bullet X nbsp Soft sheaves editA soft sheaf F displaystyle mathcal F nbsp over X is one such that any section over any closed subset of X can be extended to a global section Soft sheaves are acyclic over paracompact Hausdorff spaces Flasque or flabby sheaves editA flasque sheaf also called a flabby sheaf is a sheaf F displaystyle mathcal F nbsp with the following property if X displaystyle X nbsp is the base topological space on which the sheaf is defined and U V X displaystyle U subseteq V subseteq X nbsp are open subsets then the restriction map r U V G V F G U F displaystyle r U subseteq V Gamma V mathcal F to Gamma U mathcal F nbsp is surjective as a map of groups rings modules etc Flasque sheaves are useful because by definition their sections extend This means that they are some of the simplest sheaves to handle in terms of homological algebra Any sheaf has a canonical embedding into the flasque sheaf of all possibly discontinuous sections of the etale space and by repeating this we can find a canonical flasque resolution for any sheaf Flasque resolutions that is resolutions by means of flasque sheaves are one approach to defining sheaf cohomology Flasque sheaves are soft and acyclic Flasque is a French word that has sometimes been translated into English as flabby References edit Warner Frank W 1983 Foundations of Differentiable Manifolds and Lie Groups Springer Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 94 pp 186 181 178 170 doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 1799 0 ISBN 978 1 4419 2820 7 Godement Roger 1998 Topologie algebrique et theorie des faisceaux Paris Hermann ISBN 978 2 7056 1252 8 MR 0345092 Grothendieck Alexander 1957 Sur quelques points d algebre homologique The Tohoku Mathematical Journal Second Series 9 2 119 221 doi 10 2748 tmj 1178244839 ISSN 0040 8735 MR 0102537 Sheaf cohomology and injective resolutions on MathOverflow Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Injective sheaf amp oldid 1070319074 Flasque or flabby sheaves, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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