text/ncat.tex
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%!TEX root = ../blob1.tex
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\def\xxpar#1#2{\smallskip\noindent{\bf #1} {\it #2} \smallskip}
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\def\mmpar#1#2#3{\smallskip\noindent{\bf #1} (#2). {\it #3} \smallskip}
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\section{$n$-categories}
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\label{sec:ncats}
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\subsection{Definition of $n$-categories}
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Before proceeding, we need more appropriate definitions of $n$-categories, 
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$A_\infty$ $n$-categories, modules for these, and tensor products of these modules.
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(As is the case throughout this paper, by ``$n$-category" we implicitly intend some notion of
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a `weak' $n$-category with `strong duality'.)
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The definitions presented below tie the categories more closely to the topology
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and avoid combinatorial questions about, for example, the minimal sufficient
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collections of generalized associativity axioms; we prefer maximal sets of axioms to minimal sets.
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For examples of topological origin, it is typically easy to show that they
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satisfy our axioms.
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For examples of a more purely algebraic origin, one would typically need the combinatorial
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results that we have avoided here.
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\medskip
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Consider first ordinary $n$-categories.
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\nn{Actually, we're doing both plain and infinity cases here}
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We need a set (or sets) of $k$-morphisms for each $0\le k \le n$.
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We must decide on the ``shape" of the $k$-morphisms.
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Some $n$-category definitions model $k$-morphisms on the standard bihedron (interval, bigon, ...).
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Other definitions have a separate set of 1-morphisms for each interval $[0,l] \sub \r$, 
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a separate set of 2-morphisms for each rectangle $[0,l_1]\times [0,l_2] \sub \r^2$,
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and so on.
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(This allows for strict associativity.)
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Still other definitions \nn{need refs for all these; maybe the Leinster book \cite{MR2094071}}
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model the $k$-morphisms on more complicated combinatorial polyhedra.
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We will allow our $k$-morphisms to have any shape, so long as it is homeomorphic to 
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the standard $k$-ball.
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In other words,
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\begin{preliminary-axiom}{\ref{axiom:morphisms}}{Morphisms}
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For any $k$-manifold $X$ homeomorphic 
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to the standard $k$-ball, we have a set of $k$-morphisms
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$\cC_k(X)$.
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\end{preliminary-axiom}
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Terminology: By ``a $k$-ball" we mean any $k$-manifold which is homeomorphic to the 
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standard $k$-ball.
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We {\it do not} assume that it is equipped with a 
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preferred homeomorphism to the standard $k$-ball.
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The same goes for ``a $k$-sphere" below.
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Given a homeomorphism $f:X\to Y$ between $k$-balls (not necessarily fixed on 
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the boundary), we want a corresponding
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bijection of sets $f:\cC(X)\to \cC(Y)$.
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(This will imply ``strong duality", among other things.)
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So we replace the above with
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\begin{axiom}[Morphisms]
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\label{axiom:morphisms}
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For each $0 \le k \le n$, we have a functor $\cC_k$ from 
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the category of $k$-balls and 
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homeomorphisms to the category of sets and bijections.
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\end{axiom}
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(Note: We usually omit the subscript $k$.)
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We are so far  being deliberately vague about what flavor of $k$-balls
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we are considering.
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They could be unoriented or oriented or Spin or $\mbox{Pin}_\pm$.
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They could be topological or PL or smooth.
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%\nn{need to check whether this makes much difference}
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(If smooth, ``homeomorphism" should be read ``diffeomorphism", and we would need
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to be fussier about corners.)
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For each flavor of manifold there is a corresponding flavor of $n$-category.
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We will concentrate on the case of PL unoriented manifolds.
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Next we consider domains and ranges of morphisms (or, as we prefer to say, boundaries
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of morphisms).
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The 0-sphere is unusual among spheres in that it is disconnected.
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Correspondingly, for 1-morphisms it makes sense to distinguish between domain and range.
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(Actually, this is only true in the oriented case, with 1-morphsims parameterized
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by oriented 1-balls.)
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For $k>1$ and in the presence of strong duality the domain/range division makes less sense.
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\nn{maybe say more here; rotate disk, Frobenius reciprocity blah blah}
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We prefer to combine the domain and range into a single entity which we call the 
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boundary of a morphism.
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Morphisms are modeled on balls, so their boundaries are modeled on spheres:
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\nn{perhaps it's better to define $\cC(S^k)$ as a colimit, rather than making it new data}
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\begin{axiom}[Boundaries (spheres)]
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For each $0 \le k \le n-1$, we have a functor $\cC_k$ from 
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the category of $k$-spheres and 
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homeomorphisms to the category of sets and bijections.
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\end{axiom}
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(In order to conserve symbols, we use the same symbol $\cC_k$ for both morphisms and boundaries.)
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\begin{axiom}[Boundaries (maps)]\label{nca-boundary}
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For each $k$-ball $X$, we have a map of sets $\bd: \cC(X)\to \cC(\bd X)$.
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These maps, for various $X$, comprise a natural transformation of functors.
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\end{axiom}
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(Note that the first ``$\bd$" above is part of the data for the category, 
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while the second is the ordinary boundary of manifolds.)
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Given $c\in\cC(\bd(X))$, let $\cC(X; c) \deq \bd^{-1}(c)$.
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Most of the examples of $n$-categories we are interested in are enriched in the following sense.
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The various sets of $n$-morphisms $\cC(X; c)$, for all $n$-balls $X$ and
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all $c\in \cC(\bd X)$, have the structure of an object in some auxiliary category
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(e.g.\ vector spaces, or modules over some ring, or chain complexes),
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and all the structure maps of the $n$-category should be compatible with the auxiliary
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category structure.
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Note that this auxiliary structure is only in dimension $n$;
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$\cC(Y; c)$ is just a plain set if $\dim(Y) < n$.
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\medskip
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\nn{
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%At the moment I'm a little confused about orientations, and more specifically
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%about the role of orientation-reversing maps of boundaries when gluing oriented manifolds.
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Maybe need a discussion about what the boundary of a manifold with a 
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structure (e.g. orientation) means.
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Tentatively, I think we need to redefine the oriented boundary of an oriented $n$-manifold.
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Instead of an ordinary oriented $(n-1)$-manifold via the inward (or outward) normal 
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first (or last) convention, perhaps it is better to define the boundary to be an $(n-1)$-manifold
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equipped with an orientation of its once-stabilized tangent bundle.
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Similarly, in dimension $n-k$ we would have manifolds equipped with an orientation of 
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their $k$ times stabilized tangent bundles.
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(cf. [Stolz and Teichner].)
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Probably should also have a framing of the stabilized dimensions in order to indicate which 
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side the bounded manifold is on.
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For the moment just stick with unoriented manifolds.}
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\medskip
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We have just argued that the boundary of a morphism has no preferred splitting into
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domain and range, but the converse meets with our approval.
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That is, given compatible domain and range, we should be able to combine them into
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the full boundary of a morphism:
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\begin{axiom}[Boundary from domain and range]
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Let $S = B_1 \cup_E B_2$, where $S$ is a $k$-sphere $(0\le k\le n-1)$,
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$B_i$ is a $k$-ball, and $E = B_1\cap B_2$ is a $k{-}1$-sphere (Figure \ref{blah3}).
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Let $\cC(B_1) \times_{\cC(E)} \cC(B_2)$ denote the fibered product of the 
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two maps $\bd: \cC(B_i)\to \cC(E)$.
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Then we have an injective map
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\[
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	\gl_E : \cC(B_1) \times_{\cC(E)} \cC(B_2) \to \cC(S)
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\]
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which is natural with respect to the actions of homeomorphisms.
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\end{axiom}
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179
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\begin{figure}[!ht]
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$$
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\begin{tikzpicture}[every label/.style={green}]
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\node[fill=black, circle, label=below:$E$](S) at (0,0) {};
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\node[fill=black, circle, label=above:$E$](N) at (0,2) {};
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\draw (S) arc  (-90:90:1);
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\draw (N) arc  (90:270:1);
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\node[left] at (-1,1) {$B_1$};
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\node[right] at (1,1) {$B_2$};
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\end{tikzpicture}
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$$
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$$\mathfig{.4}{tempkw/blah3}$$
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\caption{Combining two balls to get a full boundary
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\nn{maybe smaller dots for $E$ in pdf fig}}\label{blah3}\end{figure}
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Note that we insist on injectivity above.
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Let $\cC(S)_E$ denote the image of $\gl_E$.
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We will refer to elements of $\cC(S)_E$ as ``splittable along $E$" or ``transverse to $E$". 
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If $X$ is a $k$-ball and $E \sub \bd X$ splits $\bd X$ into two $k{-}1$-balls $B_1$ and $B_2$
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as above, then we define $\cC(X)_E = \bd^{-1}(\cC(\bd X)_E)$.
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110
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We will call the projection $\cC(S)_E \to \cC(B_i)$
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a {\it restriction} map and write $\res_{B_i}(a)$
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(or simply $\res(a)$ when there is no ambiguity), for $a\in \cC(S)_E$.
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More generally, we also include under the rubric ``restriction map" the
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the boundary maps of Axiom \ref{nca-boundary} above,
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another calss of maps introduced after Axion \ref{nca-assoc} below, as well as any composition
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of restriction maps (inductive definition).
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In particular, we have restriction maps $\cC(X)_E \to \cC(B_i)$
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($i = 1, 2$, notation from previous paragraph).
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These restriction maps can be thought of as 
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domain and range maps, relative to the choice of splitting $\bd X = B_1 \cup_E B_2$.
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Next we consider composition of morphisms.
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For $n$-categories which lack strong duality, one usually considers
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$k$ different types of composition of $k$-morphisms, each associated to a different direction.
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(For example, vertical and horizontal composition of 2-morphisms.)
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In the presence of strong duality, these $k$ distinct compositions are subsumed into 
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one general type of composition which can be in any ``direction".
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\begin{axiom}[Composition]
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Let $B = B_1 \cup_Y B_2$, where $B$, $B_1$ and $B_2$ are $k$-balls ($0\le k\le n$)
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and $Y = B_1\cap B_2$ is a $k{-}1$-ball (Figure \ref{blah5}).
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Let $E = \bd Y$, which is a $k{-}2$-sphere.
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Note that each of $B$, $B_1$ and $B_2$ has its boundary split into two $k{-}1$-balls by $E$.
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We have restriction (domain or range) maps $\cC(B_i)_E \to \cC(Y)$.
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Let $\cC(B_1)_E \times_{\cC(Y)} \cC(B_2)_E$ denote the fibered product of these two maps. 
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Then (axiom) we have a map
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\[
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	\gl_Y : \cC(B_1)_E \times_{\cC(Y)} \cC(B_2)_E \to \cC(B)_E
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\]
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which is natural with respect to the actions of homeomorphisms, and also compatible with restrictions
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to the intersection of the boundaries of $B$ and $B_i$.
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If $k < n$ we require that $\gl_Y$ is injective.
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(For $k=n$, see below.)
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\end{axiom}
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179
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\begin{figure}[!ht]
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$$\mathfig{.4}{tempkw/blah5}$$
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\caption{From two balls to one ball}\label{blah5}\end{figure}
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195
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\begin{axiom}[Strict associativity] \label{nca-assoc}
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The composition (gluing) maps above are strictly associative.
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\end{axiom}
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179
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\begin{figure}[!ht]
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$$\mathfig{.65}{tempkw/blah6}$$
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\caption{An example of strict associativity}\label{blah6}\end{figure}
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192
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\nn{figure \ref{blah6} (blah6) needs a dotted line in the south split ball}
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109
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Notation: $a\bullet b \deq \gl_Y(a, b)$ and/or $a\cup b \deq \gl_Y(a, b)$.
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In the other direction, we will call the projection from $\cC(B)_E$ to $\cC(B_i)_E$ 
195
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a restriction map (one of many types of map so called) and write $\res_{B_i}(a)$ for $a\in \cC(B)_E$.
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%Compositions of boundary and restriction maps will also be called restriction maps.
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%For example, if $B$ is a $k$-ball and $Y\sub \bd B$ is a $k{-}1$-ball, there is a
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%restriction map from $\cC(B)_{\bd Y}$ to $\cC(Y)$.
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192
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We will write $\cC(B)_Y$ for the image of $\gl_Y$ in $\cC(B)$.
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We will call $\cC(B)_Y$ morphisms which are splittable along $Y$ or transverse to $Y$.
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We have $\cC(B)_Y \sub \cC(B)_E \sub \cC(B)$.
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193
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More generally, let $\alpha$ be a subdivision of a ball (or sphere) $X$ into smaller balls.
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Let $\cC(X)_\alpha \sub \cC(X)$ denote the image of the iterated gluing maps from 
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the smaller balls to $X$.
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We will also say that $\cC(X)_\alpha$ are morphisms which are splittable along $\alpha$.
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In situations where the subdivision is notationally anonymous, we will write
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$\cC(X)\spl$ for the morphisms which are splittable along (a.k.a.\ transverse to)
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the unnamed subdivision.
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If $\beta$ is a subdivision of $\bd X$, we define $\cC(X)_\beta \deq \bd\inv(\cC(\bd X)_\beta)$;
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this can also be denoted $\cC(X)\spl$ if the context contains an anonymous
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subdivision of $\bd X$ and no competing subdivision of $X$.
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The above two composition axioms are equivalent to the following one,
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which we state in slightly vague form.
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\xxpar{Multi-composition:}
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{Given any decomposition $B = B_1\cup\cdots\cup B_m$ of a $k$-ball
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into small $k$-balls, there is a 
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map from an appropriate subset (like a fibered product) 
193
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of $\cC(B_1)\spl\times\cdots\times\cC(B_m)\spl$ to $\cC(B)\spl$,
95
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and these various $m$-fold composition maps satisfy an
179
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operad-type strict associativity condition (Figure \ref{blah7}).}
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\begin{figure}[!ht]
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$$\mathfig{.8}{tempkw/blah7}$$
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\caption{Operadish composition and associativity}\label{blah7}\end{figure}
95
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The next axiom is related to identity morphisms, though that might not be immediately obvious.
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187
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\begin{axiom}[Product (identity) morphisms]
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For each $k$-ball $X$ and $m$-ball $D$, with $k+m \le n$, there is a map $\cC(X)\to \cC(X\times D)$, usually denoted $a\mapsto a\times D$ for $a\in \cC(X)$. These maps must satisfy the following conditions.
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\begin{enumerate}
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\item
95
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If $f:X\to X'$ and $\tilde{f}:X\times D \to X'\times D'$ are maps such that the diagram
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\[ \xymatrix{
96
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	X\times D \ar[r]^{\tilde{f}} \ar[d]_{\pi} & X'\times D' \ar[d]^{\pi} \\
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	X \ar[r]^{f} & X'
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} \]
109
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commutes, then we have 
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\[
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	\tilde{f}(a\times D) = f(a)\times D' .
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\]
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\item
109
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Product morphisms are compatible with gluing (composition) in both factors:
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\[
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	(a'\times D)\bullet(a''\times D) = (a'\bullet a'')\times D
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\]
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and
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\[
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	(a\times D')\bullet(a\times D'') = a\times (D'\bullet D'') .
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\]
122
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\nn{if pinched boundary, then remove first case above}
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\item
109
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Product morphisms are associative:
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\[
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	(a\times D)\times D' = a\times (D\times D') .
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\]
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(Here we are implicitly using functoriality and the obvious homeomorphism
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$(X\times D)\times D' \to X\times(D\times D')$.)
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\item
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Product morphisms are compatible with restriction:
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\[
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	\res_{X\times E}(a\times D) = a\times E
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\]
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for $E\sub \bd D$ and $a\in \cC(X)$.
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\end{enumerate}
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\end{axiom}
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\nn{need even more subaxioms for product morphisms?}
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\nn{Almost certainly we need a little more than the above axiom.
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More specifically, in order to bootstrap our way from the top dimension
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properties of identity morphisms to low dimensions, we need regular products,
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pinched products and even half-pinched products.
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I'm not sure what the best way to cleanly axiomatize the properties of these various
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products is.
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For the moment, I'll assume that all flavors of the product are at
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our disposal, and I'll plan on revising the axioms later.}
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128
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\nn{current idea for fixing this: make the above axiom a ``preliminary version"
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(as we have already done with some of the other axioms), then state the official
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axiom for maps $\pi: E \to X$ which are almost fiber bundles.
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one option is to restrict E to be a (full/half/not)-pinched product (up to homeo).
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the alternative is to give some sort of local criterion for what's allowed.
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state a gluing axiom for decomps $E = E'\cup E''$ where all three are of the correct type.
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}
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All of the axioms listed above hold for both ordinary $n$-categories and $A_\infty$ $n$-categories.
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The last axiom (below), concerning actions of 
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homeomorphisms in the top dimension $n$, distinguishes the two cases.
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We start with the plain $n$-category case.
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\begin{preliminary-axiom}{\ref{axiom:extended-isotopies}}{Isotopy invariance in dimension $n$}
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Let $X$ be an $n$-ball and $f: X\to X$ be a homeomorphism which restricts
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to the identity on $\bd X$ and is isotopic (rel boundary) to the identity.
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Then $f$ acts trivially on $\cC(X)$; $f(a) = a$ for all $a\in \cC(X)$.
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\end{preliminary-axiom}
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This axiom needs to be strengthened to force product morphisms to act as the identity.
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Let $X$ be an $n$-ball and $Y\sub\bd X$ be an $n{-}1$-ball.
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Let $J$ be a 1-ball (interval).
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We have a collaring homeomorphism $s_{Y,J}: X\cup_Y (Y\times J) \to X$.
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(Here we use the ``pinched" version of $Y\times J$.
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\nn{need notation for this})
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We define a map
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\begin{eqnarray*}
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	\psi_{Y,J}: \cC(X) &\to& \cC(X) \\
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	a & \mapsto & s_{Y,J}(a \cup ((a|_Y)\times J)) .
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\end{eqnarray*}
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(See Figure \ref{glue-collar}.)
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\begin{figure}[!ht]
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\begin{equation*}
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\begin{tikzpicture}
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\def\rad{1}
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\def\srad{0.75}
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\def\gap{4.5}
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\foreach \i in {0, 1, 2} {
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	\node(\i) at ($\i*(\gap,0)$) [draw, circle through = {($\i*(\gap,0)+(\rad,0)$)}] {};
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	\node(\i-small) at (\i.east) [circle through={($(\i.east)+(\srad,0)$)}] {};
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	\foreach \n in {1,2} {
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		\fill (intersection \n of \i-small and \i) node(\i-intersection-\n) {} circle (2pt);
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	}
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}
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\begin{scope}[decoration={brace,amplitude=10,aspect=0.5}]
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	\draw[decorate] (0-intersection-1.east) -- (0-intersection-2.east);
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\end{scope}
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\node[right=1mm] at (0.east) {$a$};
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\draw[->] ($(0.east)+(0.75,0)$) -- ($(1.west)+(-0.2,0)$);
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\draw (1-small)  circle (\srad);
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\foreach \theta in {90, 72, ..., -90} {
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	\draw[blue] (1) -- ($(1)+(\rad,0)+(\theta:\srad)$);
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}
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\filldraw[fill=white] (1) circle (\rad);
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\foreach \n in {1,2} {
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	\fill (intersection \n of 1-small and 1) circle (2pt);
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}
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\node[below] at (1-small.south) {$a \times J$};
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\draw[->] ($(1.east)+(1,0)$) -- ($(2.west)+(-0.2,0)$);
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\begin{scope}
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\path[clip] (2) circle (\rad);
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\draw[clip] (2.east) circle (\srad);
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\foreach \y in {1, 0.86, ..., -1} {
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	\draw[blue] ($(2)+(-1,\y) $)-- ($(2)+(1,\y)$);
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}
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\end{scope}
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\end{tikzpicture}
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\end{equation*}
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\begin{equation*}
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\xymatrix@C+2cm{\cC(X) \ar[r]^(0.45){\text{glue}} & \cC(X \cup \text{collar}) \ar[r]^(0.55){\text{homeo}} & \cC(X)}
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\end{equation*}
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\caption{Extended homeomorphism.}\label{glue-collar}\end{figure}
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We say that $\psi_{Y,J}$ is {\it extended isotopic} to the identity map.
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\nn{bad terminology; fix it later}
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\nn{also need to make clear that plain old isotopic to the identity implies
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extended isotopic}
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\nn{maybe remark that in some examples (e.g.\ ones based on sub cell complexes) 
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   402
extended isotopies are also plain isotopies, so
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   403
no extension necessary}
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   404
It can be thought of as the action of the inverse of
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   405
a map which projects a collar neighborhood of $Y$ onto $Y$.
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   406
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The revised axiom is
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   408
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   409
\stepcounter{axiom}
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   410
\begin{axiom-numbered}{\arabic{axiom}a}{Extended isotopy invariance in dimension $n$}
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\label{axiom:extended-isotopies}
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Let $X$ be an $n$-ball and $f: X\to X$ be a homeomorphism which restricts
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to the identity on $\bd X$ and is extended isotopic (rel boundary) to the identity.
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   414
Then $f$ acts trivially on $\cC(X)$.
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   415
\end{axiom-numbered}
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   416
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\nn{need to rephrase this, since extended isotopies don't correspond to homeomorphisms.}
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parents:
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97
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\smallskip
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   421
For $A_\infty$ $n$-categories, we replace
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   422
isotopy invariance with the requirement that families of homeomorphisms act.
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   423
For the moment, assume that our $n$-morphisms are enriched over chain complexes.
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\begin{axiom-numbered}{\arabic{axiom}b}{Families of homeomorphisms act in dimension $n$}
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   426
For each $n$-ball $X$ and each $c\in \cC(\bd X)$ we have a map of chain complexes
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\[
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	C_*(\Homeo_\bd(X))\ot \cC(X; c) \to \cC(X; c) .
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   429
\]
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diff changeset
   430
Here $C_*$ means singular chains and $\Homeo_\bd(X)$ is the space of homeomorphisms of $X$
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diff changeset
   431
which fix $\bd X$.
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diff changeset
   432
These action maps are required to be associative up to homotopy
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diff changeset
   433
\nn{iterated homotopy?}, and also compatible with composition (gluing) in the sense that
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parents: 96
diff changeset
   434
a diagram like the one in Proposition \ref{CDprop} commutes.
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diff changeset
   435
\nn{repeat diagram here?}
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diff changeset
   436
\nn{restate this with $\Homeo(X\to X')$?  what about boundary fixing property?}
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diff changeset
   437
\end{axiom-numbered}
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diff changeset
   438
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diff changeset
   439
We should strengthen the above axiom to apply to families of extended homeomorphisms.
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diff changeset
   440
To do this we need to explain how extended homeomorphisms form a topological space.
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diff changeset
   441
Roughly, the set of $n{-}1$-balls in the boundary of an $n$-ball has a natural topology,
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diff changeset
   442
and we can replace the class of all intervals $J$ with intervals contained in $\r$.
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diff changeset
   443
\nn{need to also say something about collaring homeomorphisms.}
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diff changeset
   444
\nn{this paragraph needs work.}
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diff changeset
   445
103
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diff changeset
   446
Note that if we take homology of chain complexes, we turn an $A_\infty$ $n$-category
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   447
into a plain $n$-category (enriched over graded groups).
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   448
\nn{say more here?}
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diff changeset
   449
In the other direction, if we enrich over topological spaces instead of chain complexes,
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diff changeset
   450
we get a space version of an $A_\infty$ $n$-category, with $\Homeo_\bd(X)$ acting 
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   451
instead of  $C_*(\Homeo_\bd(X))$.
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diff changeset
   452
Taking singular chains converts a space-type $A_\infty$ $n$-category into a chain complex
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
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   453
type $A_\infty$ $n$-category.
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diff changeset
   454
99
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diff changeset
   455
\medskip
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diff changeset
   456
99
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diff changeset
   457
The alert reader will have already noticed that our definition of (plain) $n$-category
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
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   458
is extremely similar to our definition of topological fields.
142
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   459
The main difference is that for the $n$-category definition we restrict our attention to balls
99
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   460
(and their boundaries), while for fields we consider all manifolds.
142
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   461
(A minor difference is that in the category definition we directly impose isotopy
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
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   462
invariance in dimension $n$, while in the fields definition we have non-isotopy-invariant fields
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
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   463
but then mod out by local relations which imply isotopy invariance.)
99
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diff changeset
   464
Thus a system of fields determines an $n$-category simply by restricting our attention to
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   465
balls.
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diff changeset
   466
This $n$-category can be thought of as the local part of the fields.
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diff changeset
   467
Conversely, given an $n$-category we can construct a system of fields via 
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   468
a colimit construction; see \S \ref{ss:ncat_fields} below.
99
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diff changeset
   469
142
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   470
%\nn{Next, say something about $A_\infty$ $n$-categories and ``homological" systems
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   471
%of fields.
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parents: 141
diff changeset
   472
%The universal (colimit) construction becomes our generalized definition of blob homology.
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diff changeset
   473
%Need to explain how it relates to the old definition.}
97
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diff changeset
   474
95
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diff changeset
   475
\medskip
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   476
195
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diff changeset
   477
\subsection{Examples of $n$-categories}\ \
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   478
101
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diff changeset
   479
\nn{these examples need to be fleshed out a bit more}
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diff changeset
   480
191
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diff changeset
   481
We now describe several classes of examples of $n$-categories satisfying our axioms.
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diff changeset
   482
191
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diff changeset
   483
\begin{example}[Maps to a space]
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   484
\rm
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diff changeset
   485
\label{ex:maps-to-a-space}%
191
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diff changeset
   486
Fix a `target space' $T$, any topological space. We define $\pi_{\leq n}(T)$, the fundamental $n$-category of $T$, as follows.
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diff changeset
   487
For $X$ a $k$-ball or $k$-sphere with $k < n$, define $\pi_{\leq n}(T)(X)$ to be the set of 
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   488
all continuous maps from $X$ to $T$.
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   489
For $X$ an $n$-ball define $\pi_{\leq n}(T)(X)$ to be continuous maps from $X$ to $T$ modulo
196
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diff changeset
   490
homotopies fixed on $\bd X$.
101
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   491
(Note that homotopy invariance implies isotopy invariance.)
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diff changeset
   492
For $a\in \cC(X)$ define the product morphism $a\times D \in \cC(X\times D)$ to
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diff changeset
   493
be $a\circ\pi_X$, where $\pi_X : X\times D \to X$ is the projection.
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diff changeset
   494
\end{example}
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   495
191
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diff changeset
   496
\begin{example}[Maps to a space, with a fiber]
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diff changeset
   497
\rm
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diff changeset
   498
\label{ex:maps-to-a-space-with-a-fiber}%
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diff changeset
   499
We can modify the example above, by fixing a
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
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diff changeset
   500
closed $m$-manifold $F$, and defining $\pi^{\times F}_{\leq n}(T)(X) = \Maps(X \times F \to T)$, otherwise leaving the definition in Example \ref{ex:maps-to-a-space} unchanged. Taking $F$ to be a point recovers the previous case.
191
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diff changeset
   501
\end{example}
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diff changeset
   502
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diff changeset
   503
\begin{example}[Linearized, twisted, maps to a space]
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   504
\rm
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   505
\label{ex:linearized-maps-to-a-space}%
191
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diff changeset
   506
We can linearize Examples \ref{ex:maps-to-a-space} and \ref{ex:maps-to-a-space-with-a-fiber} as follows.
101
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
   507
Let $\alpha$ be an $(n{+}m{+}1)$-cocycle on $T$ with values in a ring $R$
191
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diff changeset
   508
(have in mind the trivial cocycle).
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diff changeset
   509
For $X$ of dimension less than $n$ define $\pi^{\alpha, \times F}_{\leq n}(T)(X)$ as before, ignoring $\alpha$.
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diff changeset
   510
For $X$ an $n$-ball and $c\in \Maps(\bdy X \times F \to T)$ define $\pi^{\alpha, \times F}_{\leq n}(T)(X; c)$ to be
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parents: 190
diff changeset
   511
the $R$-module of finite linear combinations of continuous maps from $X\times F$ to $T$,
101
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   512
modulo the relation that if $a$ is homotopic to $b$ (rel boundary) via a homotopy
191
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diff changeset
   513
$h: X\times F\times I \to T$, then $a = \alpha(h)b$.
101
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
   514
\nn{need to say something about fundamental classes, or choose $\alpha$ carefully}
190
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diff changeset
   515
\end{example}
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parents: 189
diff changeset
   516
191
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diff changeset
   517
The next example is only intended to be illustrative, as we don't specify which definition of a `traditional $n$-category' we intend. Further, most of these definitions don't even have an agreed-upon notion of `strong duality', which we assume here.
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diff changeset
   518
\begin{example}[Traditional $n$-categories]
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diff changeset
   519
\rm
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diff changeset
   520
\label{ex:traditional-n-categories}
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diff changeset
   521
Given a `traditional $n$-category with strong duality' $C$
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
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diff changeset
   522
define $\cC(X)$, for $X$ a $k$-ball or $k$-sphere with $k < n$,
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diff changeset
   523
to be the set of all $C$-labeled sub cell complexes of $X$.
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diff changeset
   524
(See Subsection \ref{sec:fields}.)
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diff changeset
   525
For $X$ an $n$-ball and $c\in \cC(\bd X)$, define $\cC(X)$ to finite linear
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diff changeset
   526
combinations of $C$-labeled sub cell complexes of $X$
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
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diff changeset
   527
modulo the kernel of the evaluation map.
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diff changeset
   528
Define a product morphism $a\times D$, for $D$ an $m$-ball, to be the product of the cell complex of $a$ with $D$,
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diff changeset
   529
with each cell labelled by the $m$-th iterated identity morphism of the corresponding cell for $a$.
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diff changeset
   530
More generally, start with an $n{+}m$-category $C$ and a closed $m$-manifold $F$.
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diff changeset
   531
Define $\cC(X)$, for $\dim(X) < n$,
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diff changeset
   532
to be the set of all $C$-labeled sub cell complexes of $X\times F$.
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diff changeset
   533
Define $\cC(X; c)$, for $X$ an $n$-ball,
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scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
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diff changeset
   534
to be the dual Hilbert space $A(X\times F; c)$.
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diff changeset
   535
\nn{refer elsewhere for details?}
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diff changeset
   536
\end{example}
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diff changeset
   537
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diff changeset
   538
Finally, we describe a version of the bordism $n$-category suitable to our definitions.
204
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parents: 200
diff changeset
   539
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
   540
\nn{should also include example of ncats coming from TQFTs, or refer ahead to where we discuss that example}
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parents: 200
diff changeset
   541
191
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diff changeset
   542
\newcommand{\Bord}{\operatorname{Bord}}
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diff changeset
   543
\begin{example}[The bordism $n$-category]
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diff changeset
   544
\rm
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diff changeset
   545
\label{ex:bordism-category}
196
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 195
diff changeset
   546
For a $k$-ball or $k$-sphere $X$, $k<n$, define $\Bord^n(X)$ to be the set of all $k$-dimensional
191
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diff changeset
   547
submanifolds $W$ of $X\times \Real^\infty$ such that the projection $W \to X$ is transverse
196
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diff changeset
   548
to $\bd X$.
191
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diff changeset
   549
For an $n$-ball $X$ define $\Bord^n(X)$ to be homeomorphism classes (rel boundary) of such submanifolds;
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diff changeset
   550
we identify $W$ and $W'$ if $\bd W = \bd W'$ and there is a homeomorphism
196
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diff changeset
   551
$W \to W'$ which restricts to the identity on the boundary.
191
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diff changeset
   552
\end{example}
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diff changeset
   553
196
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diff changeset
   554
%\nn{the next example might be an unnecessary distraction.  consider deleting it.}
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   555
196
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diff changeset
   556
%\begin{example}[Variation on the above examples]
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parents: 195
diff changeset
   557
%We could allow $F$ to have boundary and specify boundary conditions on $X\times \bd F$,
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parents: 195
diff changeset
   558
%for example product boundary conditions or take the union over all boundary conditions.
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parents: 195
diff changeset
   559
%%\nn{maybe should not emphasize this case, since it's ``better" in some sense
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   560
%%to think of these guys as affording a representation
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   561
%%of the $n{+}1$-category associated to $\bd F$.}
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   562
%\end{example}
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kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
   563
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
   564
190
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scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
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diff changeset
   565
We have two main examples of $A_\infty$ $n$-categories, coming from maps to a target space and from the blob complex.
101
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
   566
191
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diff changeset
   567
\begin{example}[Chains of maps to a space]
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parents: 190
diff changeset
   568
\rm
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diff changeset
   569
\label{ex:chains-of-maps-to-a-space}
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diff changeset
   570
We can modify Example \ref{ex:maps-to-a-space} above to define the fundamental $A_\infty$ $n$-category $\pi^\infty_{\le n}(T)$ of a topological space $T$.
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diff changeset
   571
For $k$-balls and $k$-spheres $X$, with $k < n$, the sets $\pi^\infty_{\leq n}(T)(X)$ are just $\Maps{X \to T}$.
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diff changeset
   572
Define $\pi^\infty_{\leq n}(T)(X; c)$ for an $n$-ball $X$ and $c \in \pi^\infty_{\leq n}(T)(\bdy X)$ to be the chain complex
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diff changeset
   573
$$C_*(\Maps_c(X\times F \to T)),$$ where $\Maps_c$ denotes continuous maps restricting to $c$ on the boundary,
101
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   574
and $C_*$ denotes singular chains.
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diff changeset
   575
\end{example}
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   576
191
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diff changeset
   577
See ??? below, recovering $C_*(\Maps{M \to T})$ as (up to homotopy) the blob complex of $M$ with coefficients in $\pi^\infty_{\le n}(T)$.
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diff changeset
   578
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diff changeset
   579
\begin{example}[Blob complexes of balls (with a fiber)]
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diff changeset
   580
\rm
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diff changeset
   581
\label{ex:blob-complexes-of-balls}
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diff changeset
   582
Fix an $m$-dimensional manifold $F$.
101
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   583
Given a plain $n$-category $C$, 
190
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diff changeset
   584
when $X$ is a $k$-ball or $k$-sphere, with $k<n-m$, define $\cC(X) = C(X)$. When $X$ is an $(n-m)$-ball,
16efb5711c6f minor edits in ncats
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parents: 189
diff changeset
   585
define $\cC(X; c) = \bc^C_*(X\times F; c)$
16efb5711c6f minor edits in ncats
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diff changeset
   586
where $\bc^C_*$ denotes the blob complex based on $C$.
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diff changeset
   587
\end{example}
101
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parents: 99
diff changeset
   588
191
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diff changeset
   589
This example will be essential for ???, which relates ...
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diff changeset
   590
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diff changeset
   591
\begin{example}
190
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diff changeset
   592
\nn{should add $\infty$ version of bordism $n$-cat}
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diff changeset
   593
\end{example}
95
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parents: 94
diff changeset
   594
108
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diff changeset
   595
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parents: 107
diff changeset
   596
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   597
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   598
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   599
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diff changeset
   600
\subsection{From $n$-categories to systems of fields}
113
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diff changeset
   601
\label{ss:ncat_fields}
197
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diff changeset
   602
In this section we describe how to extend an $n$-category as described above (of either the plain or $A_\infty$ variety) to a system of fields. That is, we show that functors $\cC_k$ satisfying the axioms above have a canonical extension, from $k$-balls and $k$-spheres to arbitrary $k$-manifolds.
204
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parents: 200
diff changeset
   603
In the case of plain $n$-categories, this is just the usual construction of a TQFT
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
   604
from an $n$-category.
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parents: 200
diff changeset
   605
For $\infty$ $n$-categories \nn{or whatever we decide to call them}, this gives an alternate (and
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
   606
somewhat more canonical/tautological) construction of the blob complex.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
   607
\nn{though from this point of view it seems more natural to just add some
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
   608
adjective to ``TQFT" rather than coining a completely new term like ``blob complex".}
108
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parents: 107
diff changeset
   609
197
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diff changeset
   610
We will first define the `cell-decomposition' poset $\cJ(W)$ for any $k$-manifold $W$, for $1 \leq k \leq n$. 
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parents: 196
diff changeset
   611
An $n$-category $\cC$ provides a functor from this poset to the category of sets, and we  will define $\cC(W)$ as a suitable colimit (or homotopy colimit in the $A_\infty$ case) of this functor. 
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parents: 196
diff changeset
   612
We'll later give a more explicit description of this colimit. In the case that the $n$-category $\cC$ is enriched (e.g. associates vector spaces or chain complexes to $n$-manifolds with boundary data), then the resulting system of fields is also enriched, that is, the set associated to $W$ splits into subsets according to boundary data, and each of these subsets has the appropriate structure (e.g. a vector space or chain complex).
108
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diff changeset
   613
191
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diff changeset
   614
\begin{defn}
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diff changeset
   615
Say that a `permissible decomposition' of $W$ is a cell decomposition
108
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diff changeset
   616
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   617
	W = \bigcup_a X_a ,
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parents: 107
diff changeset
   618
\]
142
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 141
diff changeset
   619
where each closed top-dimensional cell $X_a$ is an embedded $k$-ball.
191
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diff changeset
   620
108
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diff changeset
   621
Given permissible decompositions $x$ and $y$, we say that $x$ is a refinement
191
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diff changeset
   622
of $y$, or write $x \le y$, if each $k$-ball of $y$ is a union of $k$-balls of $x$.
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diff changeset
   623
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diff changeset
   624
The category $\cJ(W)$ has objects the permissible decompositions of $W$, and a unique morphism from $x$ to $y$ if and only if $x$ is a refinement of $y$.
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diff changeset
   625
See Figure \ref{partofJfig} for an example.
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diff changeset
   626
\end{defn}
119
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parents: 117
diff changeset
   627
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   628
\begin{figure}[!ht]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   629
\begin{equation*}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   630
\mathfig{.63}{tempkw/zz2}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   631
\end{equation*}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   632
\caption{A small part of $\cJ(W)$}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   633
\label{partofJfig}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   634
\end{figure}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   635
108
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parents: 107
diff changeset
   636
191
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diff changeset
   637
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parents: 190
diff changeset
   638
An $n$-category $\cC$ determines 
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diff changeset
   639
a functor $\psi_{\cC;W}$ from $\cJ(W)$ to the category of sets 
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   640
(possibly with additional structure if $k=n$).
197
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parents: 196
diff changeset
   641
Each $k$-ball $X$ of a decomposition $y$ of $W$ has its boundary decomposed into $k{-}1$-balls,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   642
and, as described above, we have a subset $\cC(X)\spl \sub \cC(X)$ of morphisms whose boundaries
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   643
are splittable along this decomposition.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   644
%For a $k$-cell $X$ in a cell composition of $W$, we can consider the `splittable fields' $\cC(X)_{\bdy X}$, the subset of $\cC(X)$ consisting of fields which are splittable with respect to each boundary $k-1$-cell.
108
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parents: 107
diff changeset
   645
191
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diff changeset
   646
\begin{defn}
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scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   647
Define the functor $\psi_{\cC;W} : \cJ(W) \to \Set$ as follows.
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diff changeset
   648
For a decomposition $x = \bigcup_a X_a$ in $\cJ(W)$, $\psi_{\cC;W}(x)$ is the subset
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diff changeset
   649
\begin{equation}
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scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   650
\label{eq:psi-C}
197
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   651
	\psi_{\cC;W}(x) \sub \prod_a \cC(X_a)\spl
191
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diff changeset
   652
\end{equation}
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diff changeset
   653
where the restrictions to the various pieces of shared boundaries amongst the cells
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parents: 190
diff changeset
   654
$X_a$ all agree (this is a fibered product of all the labels of $n$-cells over the labels of $n-1$-cells).
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diff changeset
   655
If $x$ is a refinement of $y$, the map $\psi_{\cC;W}(x) \to \psi_{\cC;W}(y)$ is given by the composition maps of $\cC$.
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diff changeset
   656
\end{defn}
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diff changeset
   657
197
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   658
When the $n$-category $\cC$ is enriched in some monoidal category $(A,\boxtimes)$, and $W$ is a
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   659
closed $n$-manifold, the functor $\psi_{\cC;W}$ has target $A$ and
191
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scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   660
we replace the cartesian product of sets appearing in Equation \eqref{eq:psi-C} with the monoidal product $\boxtimes$. (Moreover, $\psi_{\cC;W}(x)$ might be a subobject, rather than a subset, of the product.)
197
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   661
Similar things are true if $W$ is an $n$-manifold with non-empty boundary and we
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   662
fix a field on $\bd W$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   663
(i.e. fix an element of the colimit associated to $\bd W$).
191
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diff changeset
   664
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diff changeset
   665
Finally, we construct $\cC(W)$ as the appropriate colimit of $\psi_{\cC;W}$.
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parents: 190
diff changeset
   666
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parents: 190
diff changeset
   667
\begin{defn}[System of fields functor]
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parents: 190
diff changeset
   668
If $\cC$ is an $n$-category enriched in sets or vector spaces, $\cC(W)$ is the usual colimit of the functor $\psi_{\cC;W}$.
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diff changeset
   669
That is, for each decomposition $x$ there is a map
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diff changeset
   670
$\psi_{\cC;W}(x)\to \cC(W)$, these maps are compatible with the refinement maps
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   671
above, and $\cC(W)$ is universal with respect to these properties.
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   672
\end{defn}
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   673
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   674
\begin{defn}[System of fields functor, $A_\infty$ case]
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   675
When $\cC$ is an $A_\infty$ $n$-category, $\cC(W)$ for $W$ a $k$-manifold with $k < n$ is defined as above, as the colimit of $\psi_{\cC;W}$. When $W$ is an $n$-manifold, the chain complex $\cC(W)$ is the homotopy colimit of the functor $\psi_{\cC;W}$.
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   676
\end{defn}
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   677
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   678
We can specify boundary data $c \in \cC(\bdy W)$, and define functors $\psi_{\cC;W,c}$ with values the subsets of those of $\psi_{\cC;W}$ which agree with $c$ on the boundary of $W$.
111
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 110
diff changeset
   679
197
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   680
We now give a more concrete description of the colimit in each case. If $\cC$ is enriched over vector spaces, and $W$ is an $n$-manifold, we can take the vector space $\cC(W,c)$ to be the direct sum over all permissible decompositions of $W$
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   681
\begin{equation*}
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   682
	\cC(W,c) = \left( \bigoplus_x \psi_{\cC;W,c}(x)\right) \big/ K
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   683
\end{equation*}
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   684
where $K$ is the vector space spanned by elements $a - g(a)$, with
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   685
$a\in \psi_{\cC;W,c}(x)$ for some decomposition $x$, and $g: \psi_{\cC;W,c}(x)
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   686
\to \psi_{\cC;W,c}(y)$ is value of $\psi_{\cC;W,c}$ on some antirefinement $x \leq y$.
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   687
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   688
In the $A_\infty$ case enriched over chain complexes, the concrete description of the homotopy colimit
197
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 196
diff changeset
   689
is more involved.
142
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 141
diff changeset
   690
%\nn{should probably rewrite this to be compatible with some standard reference}
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   691
Define an $m$-sequence in $W$ to be a sequence $x_0 \le x_1 \le \dots \le x_m$ of permissible decompositions of $W$.
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   692
Such sequences (for all $m$) form a simplicial set in $\cJ(W)$.
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   693
Define $V$ as a vector space via
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   694
\[
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   695
	V = \bigoplus_{(x_i)} \psi_{\cC;W}(x_0)[m] ,
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   696
\]
198
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 197
diff changeset
   697
where the sum is over all $m$-sequences $(x_i)$ and all $m$, and each summand is degree shifted by $m$. (Our homological conventions are non-standard: if a complex $U$ is concentrated in degree $0$, the complex $U[m]$ is concentrated in degree $m$.)
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   698
We endow $V$ with a differential which is the sum of the differential of the $\psi_{\cC;W}(x_0)$
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   699
summands plus another term using the differential of the simplicial set of $m$-sequences.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   700
More specifically, if $(a, \bar{x})$ denotes an element in the $\bar{x}$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   701
summand of $V$ (with $\bar{x} = (x_0,\dots,x_k)$), define
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   702
\[
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
   703
	\bd (a, \bar{x}) = (\bd a, \bar{x}) + (-1)^{\deg{a}} (g(a), d_0(\bar{x})) + (-1)^{\deg{a}} \sum_{j=1}^k (-1)^{j} (a, d_j(\bar{x})) ,
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   704
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   705
where $d_j(\bar{x}) = (x_0,\dots,x_{j-1},x_{j+1},\dots,x_k)$ and $g: \psi_\cC(x_0)\to \psi_\cC(x_1)$
198
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 197
diff changeset
   706
is the usual gluing map coming from the antirefinement $x_0 \le x_1$.
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   707
\nn{need to say this better}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   708
\nn{maybe mention that there is a version that emphasizes minimal gluings (antirefinements) which
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   709
combine only two balls at a time; for $n=1$ this version will lead to usual definition
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   710
of $A_\infty$ category}
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   711
113
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 112
diff changeset
   712
We will call $m$ the filtration degree of the complex.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 112
diff changeset
   713
We can think of this construction as starting with a disjoint copy of a complex for each
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 112
diff changeset
   714
permissible decomposition (filtration degree 0).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 112
diff changeset
   715
Then we glue these together with mapping cylinders coming from gluing maps
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 112
diff changeset
   716
(filtration degree 1).
198
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 197
diff changeset
   717
Then we kill the extra homology we just introduced with mapping cylinders between the mapping cylinders (filtration degree 2).
113
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 112
diff changeset
   718
And so on.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 112
diff changeset
   719
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   720
$\cC(W)$ is functorial with respect to homeomorphisms of $k$-manifolds.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   721
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   722
It is easy to see that
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   723
there are well-defined maps $\cC(W)\to\cC(\bd W)$, and that these maps
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   724
comprise a natural transformation of functors.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   725
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   726
\nn{need to finish explaining why we have a system of fields;
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   727
need to say more about ``homological" fields? 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   728
(actions of homeomorphisms);
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   729
define $k$-cat $\cC(\cdot\times W)$}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   730
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   731
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   732
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   733
\subsection{Modules}
95
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 94
diff changeset
   734
101
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
   735
Next we define [$A_\infty$] $n$-category modules (a.k.a.\ representations,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
   736
a.k.a.\ actions).
199
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   737
The definition will be very similar to that of $n$-categories,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   738
but with $k$-balls replaced by {\it marked $k$-balls,} defined below.
109
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 108
diff changeset
   739
\nn{** need to make sure all revisions of $n$-cat def are also made to module def.}
198
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 197
diff changeset
   740
%\nn{should they be called $n$-modules instead of just modules?  probably not, but worth considering.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 197
diff changeset
   741
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   742
Our motivating example comes from an $(m{-}n{+}1)$-dimensional manifold $W$ with boundary
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   743
in the context of an $m{+}1$-dimensional TQFT.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   744
Such a $W$ gives rise to a module for the $n$-category associated to $\bd W$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   745
This will be explained in more detail as we present the axioms.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   746
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   747
Fix an $n$-category $\cC$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   748
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   749
Define a {\it marked $k$-ball} to be a pair $(B, N)$ homeomorphic to the pair
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   750
(standard $k$-ball, northern hemisphere in boundary of standard $k$-ball).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   751
We call $B$ the ball and $N$ the marking.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   752
A homeomorphism between marked $k$-balls is a homeomorphism of balls which
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   753
restricts to a homeomorphism of markings.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   754
199
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   755
\mmpar{Module axiom 1}{Module morphisms}
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   756
{For each $0 \le k \le n$, we have a functor $\cM_k$ from 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   757
the category of marked $k$-balls and 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   758
homeomorphisms to the category of sets and bijections.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   759
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   760
(As with $n$-categories, we will usually omit the subscript $k$.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   761
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   762
For example, let $\cD$ be the $m{+}1$-dimensional TQFT which assigns to a $k$-manifold $N$ the set 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   763
of maps from $N$ to $T$, modulo homotopy (and possibly linearized) if $k=m$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   764
Let $W$ be an $(m{-}n{+}1)$-dimensional manifold with boundary.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   765
Let $\cC$ be the $n$-category with $\cC(X) \deq \cD(X\times \bd W)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   766
Let $\cM(B, N) \deq \cD((B\times \bd W)\cup (N\times W))$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   767
(The union is along $N\times \bd W$.)
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   768
(If $\cD$ were a general TQFT, we would define $\cM(B, N)$ to be
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   769
the subset of $\cD((B\times \bd W)\cup (N\times W))$ which is splittable along $N\times \bd W$.)
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   770
182
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 179
diff changeset
   771
\begin{figure}[!ht]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 179
diff changeset
   772
$$\mathfig{.8}{tempkw/blah15}$$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 179
diff changeset
   773
\caption{From manifold with boundary collar to marked ball}\label{blah15}\end{figure}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 179
diff changeset
   774
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   775
Define the boundary of a marked $k$-ball $(B, N)$ to be the pair $(\bd B \setmin N, \bd N)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   776
Call such a thing a {marked $k{-}1$-hemisphere}.
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   777
199
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   778
\mmpar{Module axiom 2}{Module boundaries (hemispheres)}
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   779
{For each $0 \le k \le n-1$, we have a functor $\cM_k$ from 
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   780
the category of marked $k$-hemispheres and 
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   781
homeomorphisms to the category of sets and bijections.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   782
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   783
In our example, let $\cM(H) \deq \cD(H\times\bd W \cup \bd H\times W)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   784
199
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   785
\mmpar{Module axiom 3}{Module boundaries (maps)}
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   786
{For each marked $k$-ball $M$ we have a map of sets $\bd: \cM(M)\to \cM(\bd M)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   787
These maps, for various $M$, comprise a natural transformation of functors.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   788
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   789
Given $c\in\cM(\bd M)$, let $\cM(M; c) \deq \bd^{-1}(c)$.
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   790
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   791
If the $n$-category $\cC$ is enriched over some other category (e.g.\ vector spaces),
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   792
then $\cM(M; c)$ should be an object in that category for each marked $n$-ball $M$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   793
and $c\in \cC(\bd M)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   794
199
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   795
\mmpar{Module axiom 4}{Boundary from domain and range}
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   796
{Let $H = M_1 \cup_E M_2$, where $H$ is a marked $k$-hemisphere ($0\le k\le n-1$),
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   797
$M_i$ is a marked $k$-ball, and $E = M_1\cap M_2$ is a marked $k{-}1$-hemisphere.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   798
Let $\cM(M_1) \times_{\cM(E)} \cM(M_2)$ denote the fibered product of the 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   799
two maps $\bd: \cM(M_i)\to \cM(E)$.
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   800
Then (axiom) we have an injective map
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   801
\[
199
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   802
	\gl_E : \cM(M_1) \times_{\cM(E)} \cM(M_2) \hookrightarrow \cM(H)
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   803
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   804
which is natural with respect to the actions of homeomorphisms.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   805
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   806
Let $\cM(H)_E$ denote the image of $\gl_E$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   807
We will refer to elements of $\cM(H)_E$ as ``splittable along $E$" or ``transverse to $E$". 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   808
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   809
199
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 198
diff changeset
   810
\mmpar{Module axiom 5}{Module to category restrictions}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   811
{For each marked $k$-hemisphere $H$ there is a restriction map
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   812
$\cM(H)\to \cC(H)$.  
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   813
($\cC(H)$ means apply $\cC$ to the underlying $k$-ball of $H$.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   814
These maps comprise a natural transformation of functors.}
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   815
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   816
Note that combining the various boundary and restriction maps above
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   817
(for both modules and $n$-categories)
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   818
we have for each marked $k$-ball $(B, N)$ and each $k{-}1$-ball $Y\sub \bd B \setmin N$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   819
a natural map from a subset of $\cM(B, N)$ to $\cC(Y)$.
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   820
The subset is the subset of morphisms which are appropriately splittable (transverse to the
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   821
cutting submanifolds).
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   822
This fact will be used below.
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   823
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   824
In our example, the various restriction and gluing maps above come from
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   825
restricting and gluing maps into $T$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   826
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   827
We require two sorts of composition (gluing) for modules, corresponding to two ways
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   828
of splitting a marked $k$-ball into two (marked or plain) $k$-balls.
119
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   829
(See Figure \ref{zzz3}.)
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   830
119
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   831
\begin{figure}[!ht]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   832
\begin{equation*}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   833
\mathfig{.63}{tempkw/zz3}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   834
\end{equation*}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   835
\caption{Module composition (top); $n$-category action (bottom)}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   836
\label{zzz3}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   837
\end{figure}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   838
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   839
First, we can compose two module morphisms to get another module morphism.
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   840
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   841
\mmpar{Module axiom 6}{Module composition}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   842
{Let $M = M_1 \cup_Y M_2$, where $M$, $M_1$ and $M_2$ are marked $k$-balls ($0\le k\le n$)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   843
and $Y = M_1\cap M_2$ is a marked $k{-}1$-ball.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   844
Let $E = \bd Y$, which is a marked $k{-}2$-hemisphere.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   845
Note that each of $M$, $M_1$ and $M_2$ has its boundary split into two marked $k{-}1$-balls by $E$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   846
We have restriction (domain or range) maps $\cM(M_i)_E \to \cM(Y)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   847
Let $\cM(M_1)_E \times_{\cM(Y)} \cM(M_2)_E$ denote the fibered product of these two maps. 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   848
Then (axiom) we have a map
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   849
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   850
	\gl_Y : \cM(M_1)_E \times_{\cM(Y)} \cM(M_2)_E \to \cM(M)_E
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   851
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   852
which is natural with respect to the actions of homeomorphisms, and also compatible with restrictions
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   853
to the intersection of the boundaries of $M$ and $M_i$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   854
If $k < n$ we require that $\gl_Y$ is injective.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   855
(For $k=n$, see below.)}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   856
119
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   857
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   858
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   859
Second, we can compose an $n$-category morphism with a module morphism to get another
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   860
module morphism.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   861
We'll call this the action map to distinguish it from the other kind of composition.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   862
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   863
\mmpar{Module axiom 7}{$n$-category action}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   864
{Let $M = X \cup_Y M'$, where $M$ and $M'$ are marked $k$-balls ($0\le k\le n$),
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   865
$X$ is a plain $k$-ball,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   866
and $Y = X\cap M'$ is a $k{-}1$-ball.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   867
Let $E = \bd Y$, which is a $k{-}2$-sphere.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   868
We have restriction maps $\cM(M')_E \to \cC(Y)$ and $\cC(X)_E\to \cC(Y)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   869
Let $\cC(X)_E \times_{\cC(Y)} \cM(M')_E$ denote the fibered product of these two maps. 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   870
Then (axiom) we have a map
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   871
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   872
	\gl_Y :\cC(X)_E \times_{\cC(Y)} \cM(M')_E \to \cM(M)_E
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   873
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   874
which is natural with respect to the actions of homeomorphisms, and also compatible with restrictions
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   875
to the intersection of the boundaries of $X$ and $M'$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   876
If $k < n$ we require that $\gl_Y$ is injective.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   877
(For $k=n$, see below.)}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   878
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   879
\mmpar{Module axiom 8}{Strict associativity}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   880
{The composition and action maps above are strictly associative.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   881
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   882
Note that the above associativity axiom applies to mixtures of module composition,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   883
action maps and $n$-category composition.
119
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   884
See Figure \ref{zzz1b}.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   885
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   886
\begin{figure}[!ht]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   887
\begin{equation*}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   888
\mathfig{1}{tempkw/zz1b}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   889
\end{equation*}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   890
\caption{Two examples of mixed associativity}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   891
\label{zzz1b}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   892
\end{figure}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 117
diff changeset
   893
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   894
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   895
The above three axioms are equivalent to the following axiom,
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   896
which we state in slightly vague form.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   897
\nn{need figure for this}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   898
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   899
\xxpar{Module multi-composition:}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   900
{Given any decomposition 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   901
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   902
	M =  X_1 \cup\cdots\cup X_p \cup M_1\cup\cdots\cup M_q
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   903
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   904
of a marked $k$-ball $M$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   905
into small (marked and plain) $k$-balls $M_i$ and $X_j$, there is a 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   906
map from an appropriate subset (like a fibered product) 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   907
of 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   908
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   909
	\cC(X_1)\times\cdots\times\cC(X_p) \times \cM(M_1)\times\cdots\times\cM(M_q) 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   910
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   911
to $\cM(M)$,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   912
and these various multifold composition maps satisfy an
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   913
operad-type strict associativity condition.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   914
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   915
(The above operad-like structure is analogous to the swiss cheese operad
146
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 145
diff changeset
   916
\cite{MR1718089}.)
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   917
%\nn{need to double-check that this is true.}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   918
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   919
\mmpar{Module axiom 9}{Product/identity morphisms}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   920
{Let $M$ be a marked $k$-ball and $D$ be a plain $m$-ball, with $k+m \le n$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   921
Then we have a map $\cM(M)\to \cM(M\times D)$, usually denoted $a\mapsto a\times D$ for $a\in \cM(M)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   922
If $f:M\to M'$ and $\tilde{f}:M\times D \to M'\times D'$ are maps such that the diagram
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   923
\[ \xymatrix{
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   924
	M\times D \ar[r]^{\tilde{f}} \ar[d]_{\pi} & M'\times D' \ar[d]^{\pi} \\
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   925
	M \ar[r]^{f} & M'
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   926
} \]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   927
commutes, then we have $\tilde{f}(a\times D) = f(a)\times D'$.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   928
111
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 110
diff changeset
   929
\nn{Need to add compatibility with various things, as in the n-cat version of this axiom above.}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   930
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   931
\nn{postpone finalizing the above axiom until the n-cat version is finalized}
110
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 109
diff changeset
   932
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   933
There are two alternatives for the next axiom, according whether we are defining
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   934
modules for plain $n$-categories or $A_\infty$ $n$-categories.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   935
In the plain case we require
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   936
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   937
\mmpar{Module axiom 10a}{Extended isotopy invariance in dimension $n$}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   938
{Let $M$ be a marked $n$-ball and $f: M\to M$ be a homeomorphism which restricts
175
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 174
diff changeset
   939
to the identity on $\bd M$ and is extended isotopic (rel boundary) to the identity.
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   940
Then $f$ acts trivially on $\cM(M)$.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   941
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   942
\nn{need to rephrase this, since extended isotopies don't correspond to homeomorphisms.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   943
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   944
We emphasize that the $\bd M$ above means boundary in the marked $k$-ball sense.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   945
In other words, if $M = (B, N)$ then we require only that isotopies are fixed 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   946
on $\bd B \setmin N$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   947
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   948
For $A_\infty$ modules we require
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   949
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   950
\mmpar{Module axiom 10b}{Families of homeomorphisms act}
103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   951
{For each marked $n$-ball $M$ and each $c\in \cM(\bd M)$ we have a map of chain complexes
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   952
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   953
	C_*(\Homeo_\bd(M))\ot \cM(M; c) \to \cM(M; c) .
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   954
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   955
Here $C_*$ means singular chains and $\Homeo_\bd(M)$ is the space of homeomorphisms of $M$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   956
which fix $\bd M$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   957
These action maps are required to be associative up to homotopy
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   958
\nn{iterated homotopy?}, and also compatible with composition (gluing) in the sense that
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   959
a diagram like the one in Proposition \ref{CDprop} commutes.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   960
\nn{repeat diagram here?}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   961
\nn{restate this with $\Homeo(M\to M')$?  what about boundary fixing property?}}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   962
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 102
diff changeset
   963
\medskip
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   964
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   965
Note that the above axioms imply that an $n$-category module has the structure
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   966
of an $n{-}1$-category.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   967
More specifically, let $J$ be a marked 1-ball, and define $\cE(X)\deq \cM(X\times J)$,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   968
where $X$ is a $k$-ball or $k{-}1$-sphere and in the product $X\times J$ we pinch 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   969
above the non-marked boundary component of $J$.
200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   970
(More specifically, we collapse $X\times P$ to a single point, where
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   971
$P$ is the non-marked boundary component of $J$.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 199
diff changeset
   972
\nn{give figure for this?}
104
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 103
diff changeset
   973
Then $\cE$ has the structure of an $n{-}1$-category.
102
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 101
diff changeset
   974
105
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   975
All marked $k$-balls are homeomorphic, unless $k = 1$ and our manifolds
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   976
are oriented or Spin (but not unoriented or $\text{Pin}_\pm$).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   977
In this case ($k=1$ and oriented or Spin), there are two types
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   978
of marked 1-balls, call them left-marked and right-marked,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   979
and hence there are two types of modules, call them right modules and left modules.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   980
In all other cases ($k>1$ or unoriented or $\text{Pin}_\pm$),
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   981
there is no left/right module distinction.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
   982
130
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 128
diff changeset
   983
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 128
diff changeset
   984
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 128
diff changeset
   985
Examples of modules:
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 128
diff changeset
   986
\begin{itemize}
142
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 141
diff changeset
   987
\item \nn{examples from TQFTs}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 141
diff changeset
   988
\item \nn{for maps to $T$, can restrict to subspaces of $T$;}
130
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 128
diff changeset
   989
\end{itemize}
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   990
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   991
\subsection{Modules as boundary labels}
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
   992
\label{moddecss}
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   993
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
   994
Let $\cC$ be an [$A_\infty$] $n$-category, let $W$ be a $k$-manifold ($k\le n$),
143
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
   995
let $\{Y_i\}$ be a collection of disjoint codimension 0 submanifolds of $\bd W$,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
   996
and let $\cN = (\cN_i)$ be an assignment of a $\cC$ module $\cN_i$ to $Y_i$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
   997
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
   998
%Let $\cC$ be an [$A_\infty$] $n$-category, let $W$ be a $k$-manifold ($k\le n$),
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
   999
%and let $\cN = (\cN_i)$ be an assignment of a $\cC$ module $\cN_i$ to each boundary 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1000
%component $\bd_i W$ of $W$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1001
%(More generally, each $\cN_i$ could label some codimension zero submanifold of $\bd W$.)
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1002
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1003
We will define a set $\cC(W, \cN)$ using a colimit construction similar to above.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1004
\nn{give ref}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1005
(If $k = n$ and our $k$-categories are enriched, then
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1006
$\cC(W, \cN)$ will have additional structure; see below.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1007
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1008
Define a permissible decomposition of $W$ to be a decomposition
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1009
\[
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1010
	W = \left(\bigcup_a X_a\right) \cup \left(\bigcup_{i,b} M_{ib}\right) ,
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1011
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1012
where each $X_a$ is a plain $k$-ball (disjoint from $\bd W$) and
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1013
each $M_{ib}$ is a marked $k$-ball intersecting $\bd_i W$,
143
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1014
with $M_{ib}\cap Y_i$ being the marking.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1015
(See Figure \ref{mblabel}.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1016
\begin{figure}[!ht]\begin{equation*}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1017
\mathfig{.9}{tempkw/mblabel}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1018
\end{equation*}\caption{A permissible decomposition of a manifold
146
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 145
diff changeset
  1019
whose boundary components are labeled by $\cC$ modules $\{\cN_i\}$.}\label{mblabel}\end{figure}
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1020
Given permissible decompositions $x$ and $y$, we say that $x$ is a refinement
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1021
of $y$, or write $x \le y$, if each ball of $y$ is a union of balls of $x$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1022
This defines a partial ordering $\cJ(W)$, which we will think of as a category.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1023
(The objects of $\cJ(D)$ are permissible decompositions of $W$, and there is a unique
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1024
morphism from $x$ to $y$ if and only if $x$ is a refinement of $y$.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1025
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1026
$\cN$ determines 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1027
a functor $\psi_\cN$ from $\cJ(W)$ to the category of sets 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1028
(possibly with additional structure if $k=n$).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1029
For a decomposition $x = (X_a, M_{ib})$ in $\cJ(W)$, define $\psi_\cN(x)$ to be the subset
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1030
\[
191
8c2c330e87f2 working on ncats -- no new material, just improving text
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1031
	\psi_\cN(x) \sub \left(\prod_a \cC(X_a)\right) \times \left(\prod_{ib} \cN_i(M_{ib})\right)
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1032
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1033
such that the restrictions to the various pieces of shared boundaries amongst the
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1034
$X_a$ and $M_{ib}$ all agree.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1035
(Think fibered product.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1036
If $x$ is a refinement of $y$, define a map $\psi_\cN(x)\to\psi_\cN(y)$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1037
via the gluing (composition or action) maps from $\cC$ and the $\cN_i$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1038
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1039
Finally, define $\cC(W, \cN)$ to be the colimit of $\psi_\cN$.
143
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1040
(Recall that if $k=n$ and we are in the $A_\infty$ case, then ``colimit" means
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1041
homotopy colimit.)
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1042
143
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1043
If $D$ is an $m$-ball, $0\le m \le n-k$, then we can similarly define
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1044
$\cC(D\times W, \cN)$, where in this case $\cN_i$ labels the submanifold 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1045
$D\times Y_i \sub \bd(D\times W)$.
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
  1046
143
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1047
It is not hard to see that the assignment $D \mapsto \cT(W, \cN)(D) \deq \cC(D\times W, \cN)$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 142
diff changeset
  1048
has the structure of an $n{-}k$-category.
144
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1049
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1050
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1051
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1052
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1053
%\subsection{Tensor products}
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1054
144
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1055
We will use a simple special case of the above 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1056
construction to define tensor products 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1057
of modules.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1058
Let $\cM_1$ and $\cM_2$ be modules for an $n$-category $\cC$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1059
(If $k=1$ and manifolds are oriented, then one should be 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1060
a left module and the other a right module.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1061
Choose a 1-ball $J$, and label the two boundary points of $J$ by $\cM_1$ and $\cM_2$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1062
Define the tensor product of $\cM_1$ and $\cM_2$ to be the 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1063
$n{-}1$-category $\cT(J, \cM_1, \cM_2)$,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1064
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1065
	\cM_1\otimes \cM_2 \deq \cT(J, \cM_1, \cM_2) .
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1066
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1067
This of course depends (functorially)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1068
on the choice of 1-ball $J$.
105
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
  1069
144
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1070
We will define a more general self tensor product (categorified coend) below.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1071
112
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 111
diff changeset
  1072
144
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1073
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1074
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1075
%\nn{what about self tensor products /coends ?}
105
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 104
diff changeset
  1076
108
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1077
\nn{maybe ``tensor product" is not the best name?}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 107
diff changeset
  1078
144
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1079
%\nn{start with (less general) tensor products; maybe change this later}
106
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 105
diff changeset
  1080
107
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 106
diff changeset
  1081
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 106
diff changeset
  1082
117
b62214646c4f preparing for semi-public version soon
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 115
diff changeset
  1083
\subsection{The $n{+}1$-category of sphere modules}
b62214646c4f preparing for semi-public version soon
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 115
diff changeset
  1084
205
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1085
In this subsection we define an $n{+}1$-category $\cS$ of ``sphere modules" 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1086
whose objects correspond to $n$-categories.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1087
This is a version of the familiar algebras-bimodules-intertwiners 2-category.
155
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 146
diff changeset
  1088
(Terminology: It is clearly appropriate to call an $S^0$ modules a bimodule,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 146
diff changeset
  1089
since a 0-sphere has an obvious bi-ness.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 146
diff changeset
  1090
This is much less true for higher dimensional spheres, 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 146
diff changeset
  1091
so we prefer the term ``sphere module" for the general case.)
144
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1092
205
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1093
The $0$- through $n$-dimensional parts of $\cC$ are various sorts of modules, and we describe
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1094
these first.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1095
The $n{+}1$-dimensional part of $\cS$ consist of intertwiners
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1096
(of garden-variety $1$-category modules associated to decorated $n$-balls).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1097
We will see below that in order for these $n{+}1$-morphisms to satisfy all of
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1098
the duality requirements of an $n{+}1$-category, we will have to assume
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1099
that our $n$-categories and modules have non-degenerate inner products.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1100
(In other words, we need to assume some extra duality on the $n$-categories and modules.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1101
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1102
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1103
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1104
Our first task is to define an $n$-category $m$-sphere module, for $0\le m \le n-1$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1105
These will be defined in terms of certain classes of marked balls, very similarly
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1106
to the definition of $n$-category modules above.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1107
(This, in turn, is very similar to our definition of $n$-category.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1108
Because of this similarity, we only sketch the definitions below.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1109
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1110
We start with 0-sphere modules, which also could reasonably be called (categorified) bimodules.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1111
(For $n=1$ they are precisely bimodules in the usual, uncategorified sense.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1112
Define a 0-marked $k$-ball $(X, M)$, $1\le k \le n$, to be a pair homeomorphic to the standard
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1113
$(B^k, B^{k-1})$, where $B^{k-1}$ is properly embedded in $B^k$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1114
See Figure xxxx.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1115
Another way to say this is that $(X, M)$ is homeomorphic to $B^{k-1}\times([-1,1], \{0\})$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1116
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1117
0-marked balls can be cut into smaller balls in various ways.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1118
These smaller balls could be 0-marked or plain.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1119
We can also take the boundary of a 0-marked ball, which is 0-marked sphere.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1120
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1121
Fix $n$-categories $\cA$ and $\cB$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1122
These will label the two halves of a 0-marked $k$-ball.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1123
The 0-sphere module we define next will depend on $\cA$ and $\cB$ 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1124
(it's an $\cA$-$\cB$ bimodule), but we will suppress that from the notation.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1125
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1126
An $n$-category 0-sphere module $\cM$ is a collection of functors $\cM_k$ from the category
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1127
of 0-marked $k$-balls, $1\le k \le n$,
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1128
(with the two halves labeled by $\cA$ and $\cB$) to the category of sets.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1129
If $k=n$ these sets should be enriched to the extent $\cA$ and $\cB$ are.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1130
Given a decomposition of a 0-marked $k$-ball $X$ into smaller balls $X_i$, we have
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1131
morphism sets $\cA_k(X_i)$ (if $X_i$ lies on the $\cA$-labeled side)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1132
or $\cB_k(X_i)$ (if $X_i$ lies on the $\cB$-labeled side)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1133
or $\cM_k(X_i)$ (if $X_i$ intersects the marking and is therefore a smaller 0-marked ball).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1134
Corresponding to this decomposition we have an action and/or composition map
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1135
from the product of these various sets into $\cM(X)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1136
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1137
\medskip
107
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 106
diff changeset
  1138
206
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1139
Part of the structure of an $n$-cat 0-sphere module is captured my saying it is
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1140
a collection $\cD^{ab}$ of $n{-}1$-categories, indexed by pairs $(a, b)$ of objects (0-morphisms)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1141
of $\cA$ and $\cB$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1142
Let $J$ be some standard 0-marked 1-ball (i.e.\ an interval with a marked point in its interior).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1143
Given a $j$-ball $X$, $0\le j\le n-1$, we define
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1144
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1145
	\cD(X) \deq \cM(X\times J) .
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1146
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1147
The product is pinched over the boundary of $J$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1148
$\cD$ breaks into ``blocks" according to the restrictions to the pinched points of $X\times J$
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1149
(see Figure xxxx).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1150
These restrictions are 0-morphisms $(a, b)$ of $\cA$ and $\cB$.
107
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 106
diff changeset
  1151
206
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1152
More generally, consider an interval with interior marked points, and with the complements
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1153
of these points labeled by $n$-categories $\cA_i$ ($0\le i\le l$) and the marked points labeled
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1154
by $\cA_i$-$\cA_{i+1}$ bimodules $\cM_i$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1155
(See Figure xxxx.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1156
To this data we can apply to coend construction as in Subsection \ref{moddecss} above
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1157
to obtain an $\cA_0$-$\cA_l$ bimodule and, forgetfully, an $n{-}1$-category.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1158
This amounts to a definition of taking tensor products of bimodules over $n$-categories.
205
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 204
diff changeset
  1159
206
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1160
We could also similarly mark and label a circle, obtaining an $n{-}1$-category
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1161
associated to the marked and labeled circle.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1162
(See Figure xxxx.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1163
If the circle is divided into two intervals, we can think of this $n{-}1$-category
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1164
as the 2-ended tensor product of the two bimodules associated to the two intervals.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1165
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1166
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1167
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1168
Next we define $n$-category 1-sphere modules.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1169
These are just representations of (modules for) $n{-}1$-categories associated to marked and labeled 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1170
circles (1-spheres) which we just introduced.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1171
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1172
Equivalently, we can define 1-sphere modules in terms of 1-marked $k$-balls, $2\le k\le n$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1173
Fix a marked (and labeled) circle $S$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 205
diff changeset
  1174
Let $C(S)$ denote the cone of $S$, a marked 2-ball (Figure xxxx).
207
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1175
\nn{I need to make up my mind whether marked things are always labeled too.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1176
For the time being, let's say they are.}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1177
A 1-marked $k$-ball is anything homeomorphic to $B^j \times C(S)$, $0\le j\le n-2$, 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1178
where $B^j$ is the standard $j$-ball.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1179
1-marked $k$-balls can be decomposed in various ways into smaller balls, which are either 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1180
smaller 1-marked $k$-balls or the product of an unmarked ball with a marked interval.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1181
We now proceed as in the above module definitions.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1182
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1183
A $n$-category 1-sphere module is, among other things, an $n{-}2$-category $\cD$ with
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1184
\[
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1185
	\cD(X) \deq \cM(X\times C(S)) .
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1186
\]
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1187
The product is pinched over the boundary of $C(S)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1188
$\cD$ breaks into ``blocks" according to the restriction to the 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1189
image of $\bd C(S) = S$ in $X\times C(S)$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1190
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1191
More generally, consider a 2-manifold $Y$ 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1192
(e.g.\ 2-ball or 2-sphere) marked by an embedded 1-complex $K$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1193
The components of $Y\setminus K$ are labeled by $n$-categories, 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1194
the edges of $K$ are labeled by 0-sphere modules, 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1195
and the 0-cells of $K$ are labeled by 1-sphere modules.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1196
We can now apply the coend construction and obtain an $n{-}2$-category.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1197
If $Y$ has boundary then this $n{-}2$-category is a module for the $n{-}1$-manifold
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1198
associated to the (marked, labeled) boundary of $Y$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1199
In particular, if $\bd Y$ is a 1-sphere then we get a 1-sphere module as defined above.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1200
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1201
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1202
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1203
It should now be clear how to define $n$-category $m$-sphere modules for $0\le m \le n-1$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1204
For example, there is an $n{-}2$-category associated to a marked, labeled 2-sphere,
208
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1205
and a 2-sphere module is a representation of such an $n{-}2$-category.
207
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1206
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1207
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1208
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1209
We can now define the $n$- or less dimensional part of our $n{+}1$-category $\cS$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1210
Choose some collection of $n$-categories, then choose some collections of bimodules for
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1211
these $n$-categories, then choose some collection of 1-sphere modules for the various
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1212
possible marked 1-spheres labeled by the $n$-categories and bimodules, and so on.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1213
Let $L_i$ denote the collection of $i{-}1$-sphere modules we have chosen.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1214
(For convenience, we declare a $(-1)$-sphere module to be an $n$-category.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1215
There is a wide range of possibilities.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1216
$L_0$ could contain infinitely many $n$-categories or just one.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1217
For each pair of $n$-categories in $L_0$, $L_1$ could contain no bimodules at all or 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1218
it could contain several.
208
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1219
The only requirement is that each $k$-sphere module be a module for a $k$-sphere $n{-}k$-category
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1220
constructed out of labels taken from $L_j$ for $j<k$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1221
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1222
We now define $\cS(X)$, for $X$ of dimension at most $n$, to be the set of all 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1223
cell-complexes $K$ embedded in $X$, with the codimension-$j$ parts of $(X, K)$ labeled
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1224
by elements of $L_j$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1225
As described above, we can think of each decorated $k$-ball as defining a $k{-}1$-sphere module
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1226
for the $n{-}k{+}1$-category associated to its decorated boundary.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1227
Thus the $k$-morphisms of $\cS$ (for $k\le n$) can be thought 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1228
of as $n$-category $k{-}1$-sphere modules 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1229
(generalizations of bimodules).
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1230
On the other hand, we can equally think of the $k$-morphisms as decorations on $k$-balls, 
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1231
and from this (official) point of view it is clear that they satisfy all of the axioms of an
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1232
$n{+}1$-category.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1233
(All of the axioms for the less-than-$n{+}1$-dimensional part of an $n{+}1$-category, that is.)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1234
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1235
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1236
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1237
Next we define the $n{+}1$-morphisms of $\cS$.
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1238
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1239
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1240
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1241
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1242
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1243
207
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1244
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1245
\nn{...}
101
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
  1246
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
  1247
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
  1248
\hrule
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
  1249
\medskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
  1250
95
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 94
diff changeset
  1251
\nn{to be continued...}
101
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 99
diff changeset
  1252
\medskip
98
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1253
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1254
208
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1255
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1256
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1257
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 207
diff changeset
  1258
98
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1259
Stuff that remains to be done (either below or in an appendix or in a separate section or in
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1260
a separate paper):
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1261
\begin{itemize}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1262
\item spell out what difference (if any) Top vs PL vs Smooth makes
207
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 206
diff changeset
  1263
\item discuss Morita equivalence
130
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 128
diff changeset
  1264
\item morphisms of modules; show that it's adjoint to tensor product
139
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 134
diff changeset
  1265
(need to define dual module for this)
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 134
diff changeset
  1266
\item functors
98
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1267
\end{itemize}
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1268
204
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
  1269
\bigskip
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
  1270
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
  1271
\hrule
134
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1272
\nn{Some salvaged paragraphs that we might want to work back in:}
204
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 200
diff changeset
  1273
\bigskip
98
kevin@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 97
diff changeset
  1274
134
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1275
Appendix \ref{sec:comparing-A-infty} explains the translation between this definition of an $A_\infty$ $1$-category and the usual one expressed in terms of `associativity up to higher homotopy', as in \cite{MR1854636}. (In this version of the paper, that appendix is incomplete, however.)
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1276
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1277
The motivating example is `chains of maps to $M$' for some fixed target space $M$. This is a topological $A_\infty$ category $\Xi_M$ with $\Xi_M(J) = C_*(\Maps(J \to M))$. The gluing maps $\Xi_M(J) \tensor \Xi_M(J') \to \Xi_M(J \cup J')$  takes the product of singular chains, then glues maps to $M$ together; the associativity condition is automatically satisfied. The evaluation map $\ev_{J,J'} : \CD{J \to J'} \tensor \Xi_M(J) \to \Xi_M(J')$ is the composition
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1278
\begin{align*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1279
\CD{J \to J'} \tensor C_*(\Maps(J \to M)) & \to C_*(\Diff(J \to J') \times \Maps(J \to M)) \\ & \to C_*(\Maps(J' \to M)),
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1280
\end{align*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1281
where the first map is the product of singular chains, and the second is precomposition by the inverse of a diffeomorphism.
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1282
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1283
We now give two motivating examples, as theorems constructing other homological systems of fields,
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1284
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1285
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1286
\begin{thm}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1287
For a fixed target space $X$, `chains of maps to $X$' is a homological system of fields $\Xi$, defined as
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1288
\begin{equation*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1289
\Xi(M) = \CM{M}{X}.
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1290
\end{equation*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1291
\end{thm}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1292
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1293
\begin{thm}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1294
Given an $n$-dimensional system of fields $\cF$, and a $k$-manifold $F$, there is an $n-k$ dimensional homological system of fields $\cF^{\times F}$ defined by
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1295
\begin{equation*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1296
\cF^{\times F}(M) = \cB_*(M \times F, \cF).
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1297
\end{equation*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1298
\end{thm}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1299
We might suggestively write $\cF^{\times F}$ as  $\cB_*(F \times [0,1]^b, \cF)$, interpreting this as an (undefined!) $A_\infty$ $b$-category, and then as the resulting homological system of fields, following a recipe analogous to that given above for $A_\infty$ $1$-categories.
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1300
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1301
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1302
In later sections, we'll prove the following two unsurprising theorems, about the (as-yet-undefined) blob homology of these homological systems of fields.
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1303
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1304
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1305
\begin{thm}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1306
\begin{equation*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1307
\cB_*(M, \Xi) \iso \Xi(M)
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1308
\end{equation*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1309
\end{thm}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1310
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1311
\begin{thm}[Product formula]
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1312
Given a $b$-manifold $B$, an $f$-manifold $F$ and a $b+f$ dimensional system of fields,
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1313
there is a quasi-isomorphism
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1314
\begin{align*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1315
\cB_*(B \times F, \cF) & \quismto \cB_*(B, \cF^{\times F})
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1316
\end{align*}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1317
\end{thm}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1318
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1319
\begin{question}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1320
Is it possible to compute the blob homology of a non-trivial bundle in terms of the blob homology of its fiber?
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1321
\end{question}
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1322
scott@6e1638ff-ae45-0410-89bd-df963105f760
parents: 130
diff changeset
  1323
\hrule