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%!TEX root = ../blob1.tex
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\section{Introduction}
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We construct the ``blob complex'' $\bc_*(M; \cC)$ associated to an $n$-manifold $M$ and a ``linear $n$-category with strong duality'' $\cC$. This blob complex provides a simultaneous generalisation of several well-understood constructions:
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\begin{itemize}
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\item The vector space $H_0(\bc_*(M; \cC))$ is isomorphic to the usual topological quantum field theory invariant of $M$ associated to $\cC$. (See \S \ref{sec:fields} \nn{more specific}.)
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\item When $n=1$, $\cC$ is just an associative algebroid, and $\bc_*(S^1; \cC)$ is quasi-isomorphic to the Hochschild complex $\HC_*(\cC)$. (See \S \ref{sec:hochschild}.)
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\item When $\cC$ is the polynomial algebra $k[t]$, thought of as an n-category (see \S \ref{sec:comm_alg}), we have 
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that $\bc_*(M; k[t])$ is homotopy equivalent to $C_*(\Sigma^\infty(M), k)$, the singular chains
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on the configurations space of unlabeled points in $M$.
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%$$H_*(\bc_*(M; k[t])) = H^{\text{sing}}_*(\Delta^\infty(M), k).$$ 
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\end{itemize}
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The blob complex has good formal properties, summarized in \S \ref{sec:properties}. These include an action of $\CD{M}$, 
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\nn{maybe replace Diff with Homeo?}
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extending the usual $\Diff(M)$ action on the TQFT space $H_0$ (see Property \ref{property:evaluation}) and a gluing formula allowing calculations by cutting manifolds into smaller parts (see Property \ref{property:gluing}).
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The blob complex definition is motivated by the desire for a `derived' analogue of the usual TQFT Hilbert space (replacing quotient of fields by local relations with some sort of `resolution'), 
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\nn{are the quotes around `derived' and `resolution' necessary?}
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and for a generalization of Hochschild homology to higher $n$-categories. We would also like to be able to talk about $\CM{M}{T}$ when $T$ is an $n$-category rather than a manifold. The blob complex allows us to do all of these! More detailed motivations are described in \S \ref{sec:motivations}.
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We expect applications of the blob complex to contact topology and Khovanov homology but do not address these in this paper. See \S \ref{sec:future} for slightly more detail.
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\subsubsection{Structure of the paper}
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The three subsections of the introduction explain our motivations in defining the blob complex (see \S \ref{sec:motivations}), summarise the formal properties of the blob complex (see \S \ref{sec:properties}) and outline anticipated future directions and applications (see \S \ref{sec:future}).
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The first part of the paper (sections \S \ref{sec:fields}---\S \ref{sec:evaluation}) gives the definition of the blob complex, and establishes some of its properties. There are many alternative definitions of $n$-categories, and part of our difficulty defining the blob complex is simply explaining what we mean by an ``$n$-category with strong duality'' as one of the inputs. At first we entirely avoid this problem by introducing the notion of a `system of fields', and define the blob complex associated to an $n$-manifold and an $n$-dimensional system of fields. We sketch the construction of a system of fields from a $1$-category or from a pivotal $2$-category.
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Nevertheless, when we attempt to establish all of the observed properties of the blob complex, we find this situation unsatisfactory. Thus, in the second part of the paper (section \S \ref{sec:ncats}) we pause and give yet another definition of an $n$-category, or rather a definition of an $n$-category with strong duality. (It's not clear that we could remove the duality conditions from our definition, even if we wanted to.) We call these ``topological $n$-categories'', to differentiate them from previous versions. Moreover, we find that we need analogous $A_\infty$ $n$-categories, and we define these as well following very similar axioms.
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\nn{Not sure that the next para is appropriate here}
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The basic idea is that each potential definition of an $n$-category makes a choice about the `shape' of morphisms. We try to be as lax as possible; a topological $n$-category associates a vector space to every $B$ diffeomorphic to the $n$-ball. This vector spaces glue together associatively. For an $A_\infty$ $n$-category, we instead associate a chain complex to each such $B$. We require that diffeomorphisms (or the complex of singular chains of diffeomorphisms in the $A_\infty$ case) act. The axioms for an $A_\infty$ $n$-category are designed to capture two main examples: the blob complexes of $n$-balls, using a topological $n$-category, and the complex $\CM{-}{X}$ of maps to a fixed target space $X$.
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\nn{we might want to make our choice of notation here ($B$, $X$) consistent with later sections ($X$, $T$), or vice versa}
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In  \S \ref{sec:ainfblob} we explain how to construct a system of fields from a topological $n$-category, and give an alternative definition of the blob complex for an $n$-manifold and an $A_\infty$ $n$-category. Using these definitions, we show how to use the blob complex to `resolve' any topological $n$-category as an $A_\infty$ $n$-category, and relate the first and second definitions of the blob complex. We use the blob complex for $A_\infty$ $n$-categories to establish important properties of the blob complex (in both variants), in particular the `gluing formula' of Property \ref{property:gluing} below.
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\nn{KW: the previous two paragraphs seem a little awkward to me, but I don't presently have a good idea for fixing them.}
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Finally, later sections address other topics. Section \S \ref{sec:comm_alg} describes the blob complex when $\cC$ is a commutative algebra, thought of as a topological $n$-category, in terms of the topology of $M$. Section \S \ref{sec:deligne} states (and in a later edition of this paper, hopefully proves) a generalisation of the Deligne conjecture (that the little discs operad acts on Hochschild cohomology) in terms of the blob complex. The appendixes prove technical results about $\CD{M}$, and make connections between our definitions of $n$-categories and familar definitions for $n=1$ and $n=2$, as well as relating the $n=1$ case of our $A_\infty$ $n$-categories with usual $A_\infty$ algebras.
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\nn{some more things to cover in the intro}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item related: we are being unsophisticated from a homotopy theory point of
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view and using chain complexes in many places where we could be by with spaces
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\item ? one of the points we make (far) below is that there is not really much
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difference between (a) systems of fields and local relations and (b) $n$-cats;
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thus we tend to switch between talking in terms of one or the other
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\end{itemize}
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\medskip\hrule\medskip
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\subsection{Motivations}
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\label{sec:motivations}
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[Old outline for intro]
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\begin{itemize}
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\item Starting point: TQFTs via fields and local relations.
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This gives a satisfactory treatment for semisimple TQFTs
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(i.e.\ TQFTs for which the cylinder 1-category associated to an
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$n{-}1$-manifold $Y$ is semisimple for all $Y$).
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\item For non-semiemple TQFTs, this approach is less satisfactory.
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Our main motivating example (though we will not develop it in this paper)
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is the $4{+}1$-dimensional TQFT associated to Khovanov homology.
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It associates a bigraded vector space $A_{Kh}(W^4, L)$ to a 4-manifold $W$ together
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with a link $L \subset \bd W$.
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The original Khovanov homology of a link in $S^3$ is recovered as $A_{Kh}(B^4, L)$.
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\item How would we go about computing $A_{Kh}(W^4, L)$?
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For $A_{Kh}(B^4, L)$, the main tool is the exact triangle (long exact sequence)
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\nn{... $L_1, L_2, L_3$}.
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Unfortunately, the exactness breaks if we glue $B^4$ to itself and attempt
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to compute $A_{Kh}(S^1\times B^3, L)$.
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According to the gluing theorem for TQFTs-via-fields, gluing along $B^3 \subset \bd B^4$
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corresponds to taking a coend (self tensor product) over the cylinder category
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associated to $B^3$ (with appropriate boundary conditions).
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The coend is not an exact functor, so the exactness of the triangle breaks.
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\item The obvious solution to this problem is to replace the coend with its derived counterpart.
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This presumably works fine for $S^1\times B^3$ (the answer being the Hochschild homology
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of an appropriate bimodule), but for more complicated 4-manifolds this leaves much to be desired.
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If we build our manifold up via a handle decomposition, the computation
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would be a sequence of derived coends.
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A different handle decomposition of the same manifold would yield a different
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sequence of derived coends.
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To show that our definition in terms of derived coends is well-defined, we
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would need to show that the above two sequences of derived coends yield the same answer.
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This is probably not easy to do.
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\item Instead, we would prefer a definition for a derived version of $A_{Kh}(W^4, L)$
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which is manifestly invariant.
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(That is, a definition that does not
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involve choosing a decomposition of $W$.
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After all, one of the virtues of our starting point --- TQFTs via field and local relations ---
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is that it has just this sort of manifest invariance.)
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\item The solution is to replace $A_{Kh}(W^4, L)$, which is a quotient
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\[
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 \text{linear combinations of fields} \;\big/\; \text{local relations} ,
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\]
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with an appropriately free resolution (the ``blob complex")
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\[
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	\cdots\to \bc_2(W, L) \to \bc_1(W, L) \to \bc_0(W, L) .
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\]
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Here $\bc_0$ is linear combinations of fields on $W$,
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$\bc_1$ is linear combinations of local relations on $W$,
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$\bc_2$ is linear combinations of relations amongst relations on $W$,
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and so on.
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\item None of the above ideas depend on the details of the Khovanov homology example,
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so we develop the general theory in the paper and postpone specific applications
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to later papers.
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\end{itemize}
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\subsection{Formal properties}
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\label{sec:properties}
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We now summarize the results of the paper in the following list of formal properties.
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\begin{property}[Functoriality]
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\label{property:functoriality}%
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The blob complex is functorial with respect to homeomorphisms. That is, 
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for fixed $n$-category / fields $\cC$, the association
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\begin{equation*}
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X \mapsto \bc_*^{\cC}(X)
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\end{equation*}
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is a functor from $n$-manifolds and homeomorphisms between them to chain complexes and isomorphisms between them.
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\end{property}
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The blob complex is also functorial with respect to $\cC$, although we will not address this in detail here.
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\begin{property}[Disjoint union]
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\label{property:disjoint-union}
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The blob complex of a disjoint union is naturally the tensor product of the blob complexes.
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\begin{equation*}
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\bc_*(X_1 \du X_2) \iso \bc_*(X_1) \tensor \bc_*(X_2)
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\end{equation*}
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\end{property}
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If an $n$-manifold $X_\text{cut}$ contains $Y \sqcup Y^\text{op}$ as a codimension $0$-submanifold of its boundary, write $X_\text{glued} = X_\text{cut} \bigcup_{Y}\selfarrow$ for the manifold obtained by gluing together $Y$ and $Y^\text{op}$. Note that this includes the case of gluing two disjoint manifolds together.
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\begin{property}[Gluing map]
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\label{property:gluing-map}%
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%If $X_1$ and $X_2$ are $n$-manifolds, with $Y$ a codimension $0$-submanifold of $\bdy X_1$, and $Y^{\text{op}}$ a codimension $0$-submanifold of $\bdy X_2$, there is a chain map
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%\begin{equation*}
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%\gl_Y: \bc_*(X_1) \tensor \bc_*(X_2) \to \bc_*(X_1 \cup_Y X_2).
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%\end{equation*}
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Given a gluing $X_\mathrm{cut} \to X_\mathrm{glued}$, there is
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a natural map
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\[
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	\bc_*(X_\mathrm{cut}) \to \bc_*(X_\mathrm{glued}) .
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\]
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(Natural with respect to homeomorphisms, and also associative with respect to iterated gluings.)
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\end{property}
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\begin{property}[Contractibility]
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\label{property:contractibility}%
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\nn{this holds with field coefficients, or more generally when
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the map to 0-th homology has a splitting; need to fix statement}
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The blob complex on an $n$-ball is contractible in the sense that it is quasi-isomorphic to its $0$-th homology. Moreover, the $0$-th homology of balls can be canonically identified with the original $n$-category $\cC$.
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\begin{equation}
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\xymatrix{\bc_*^{\cC}(B^n) \ar[r]^{\iso}_{\text{qi}} & H_0(\bc_*^{\cC}(B^n))}
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\end{equation}
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\end{property}
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\begin{property}[Skein modules]
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\label{property:skein-modules}%
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The $0$-th blob homology of $X$ is the usual 
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(dual) TQFT Hilbert space (a.k.a.\ skein module) associated to $X$
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by $\cC$. (See \S \ref{sec:local-relations}.)
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\begin{equation*}
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H_0(\bc_*^{\cC}(X)) \iso A^{\cC}(X)
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\end{equation*}
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\end{property}
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\begin{property}[Hochschild homology when $X=S^1$]
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\label{property:hochschild}%
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The blob complex for a $1$-category $\cC$ on the circle is
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quasi-isomorphic to the Hochschild complex.
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\begin{equation*}
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\xymatrix{\bc_*^{\cC}(S^1) \ar[r]^{\iso}_{\text{qi}} & \HC_*(\cC)}
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\end{equation*}
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\end{property}
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Here $\CD{X}$ is the singular chain complex of the space of diffeomorphisms of $X$, fixed on $\bdy X$.
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\begin{property}[$C_*(\Diff(-))$ action]
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\label{property:evaluation}%
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There is a chain map
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\begin{equation*}
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\ev_X: \CD{X} \tensor \bc_*(X) \to \bc_*(X).
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\end{equation*}
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Restricted to $C_0(\Diff(X))$ this is just the action of diffeomorphisms described in Property \ref{property:functoriality}. Further, for
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any codimension $1$-submanifold $Y \subset X$ dividing $X$ into $X_1 \cup_Y X_2$, the following diagram
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(using the gluing maps described in Property \ref{property:gluing-map}) commutes.
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\begin{equation*}
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\xymatrix{
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     \CD{X} \otimes \bc_*(X) \ar[r]^{\ev_X}    & \bc_*(X) \\
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     \CD{X_1} \otimes \CD{X_2} \otimes \bc_*(X_1) \otimes \bc_*(X_2)
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        \ar@/_4ex/[r]_{\ev_{X_1} \otimes \ev_{X_2}}  \ar[u]^{\gl^{\Diff}_Y \otimes \gl_Y}  &
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            \bc_*(X_1) \otimes \bc_*(X_2) \ar[u]_{\gl_Y}
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}
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\end{equation*}
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\nn{should probably say something about associativity here (or not?)}
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\nn{maybe do self-gluing instead of 2 pieces case:}
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Further, for
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any codimension $0$-submanifold $Y \sqcup Y^\text{op} \subset \bdy X$ the following diagram
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(using the gluing maps described in Property \ref{property:gluing-map}) commutes.
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\begin{equation*}
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\xymatrix@C+2cm{
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     \CD{X \bigcup_Y \selfarrow} \otimes \bc_*(X \bigcup_Y \selfarrow) \ar[r]^<<<<<<<<<<<<{\ev_{(X \bigcup_Y \scalebox{0.5}{\selfarrow})}}    & \bc_*(X \bigcup_Y \selfarrow) \\
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     \CD{X} \otimes \bc_*(X)
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        \ar[r]_{\ev_{X}}  \ar[u]^{\gl^{\Diff}_Y \otimes \gl_Y}  &
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            \bc_*(X) \ar[u]_{\gl_Y}
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}
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\end{equation*}
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\end{property}
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In \S \ref{sec:ncats} we introduce the notion of topological $n$-categories, from which we can construct systems of fields, as well as the notion of an $A_\infty$ $n$-category.
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\begin{property}[Blob complexes of balls form an $A_\infty$ $n$-category]
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\label{property:blobs-ainfty}
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Let $\cC$ be  a topological $n$-category.  Let $Y$ be an $n{-}k$-manifold. 
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Define $A_*(Y, \cC)$ on each $m$-ball $D$, for $0 \leq m \leq k$ to be the set $$A_*(Y, \cC)(D) = \bc_*(Y \times D, \cC).$$ (When $m=k$ the subsets with fixed boundary conditions form a chain complex.) These sets have the structure of an $A_\infty$ $k$-category.
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\nn{the subscript * is only appropriate when $m=k$. }
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\end{property}
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\begin{rem}
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Perhaps the most interesting case is when $Y$ is just a point; then we have a way of building an $A_\infty$ $n$-category from a topological $n$-category.
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\end{rem}
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There is a version of the blob complex for $\cC$ an $A_\infty$ $n$-category
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instead of a garden variety $n$-category; this is described in \S \ref{sec:ainfblob}.
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\begin{property}[Product formula]
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Let $W$ be a $k$-manifold and $Y$ be an $n-k$ manifold. Let $\cC$ be an $n$-category.
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Let $A_*(Y)$ be the $A_\infty$ $k$-category associated to $Y$ via blob homology (see Property \ref{property:blobs-ainfty}).
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Then
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\[
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	\bc_*(Y^{n-k}\times W^k, \cC) \simeq \bc_*(W, A_*(Y)) .
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\]
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Note on the right here we have the version of the blob complex for $A_\infty$ $n$-categories.
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\end{property}
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It seems reasonable to expect a generalization describing an arbitrary fibre bundle. See in particular \S \ref{moddecss} for the framework as such a statement.
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\begin{property}[Gluing formula]
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\label{property:gluing}%
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\mbox{}% <-- gets the indenting right
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\begin{itemize}
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\item For any $(n-1)$-manifold $Y$, the blob homology of $Y \times I$ is
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naturally an $A_\infty$ category. % We'll write $\bc_*(Y)$ for $\bc_*(Y \times I)$ below.
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\item For any $n$-manifold $X$, with $Y$ a codimension $0$-submanifold of its boundary, the blob homology of $X$ is naturally an
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$A_\infty$ module for $\bc_*(Y \times I)$.
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\item For any $n$-manifold $X_\text{glued} = X_\text{cut} \bigcup_Y \selfarrow$, the blob complex $\bc_*(X_\text{glued})$ is the $A_\infty$ self-tensor product of
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$\bc_*(X_\text{cut})$ as an $\bc_*(Y \times I)$-bimodule.
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\begin{equation*}
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\bc_*(X_\text{glued}) \simeq \bc_*(X_\text{cut}) \Tensor^{A_\infty}_{\mathclap{\bc_*(Y \times I)}} \selfarrow
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\end{equation*}
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\end{itemize}
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\end{property}
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\begin{property}[Mapping spaces]
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Let $\pi^\infty_{\le n}(W)$ denote the $A_\infty$ $n$-category based on maps 
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$B^n \to W$.
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(The case $n=1$ is the usual $A_\infty$ category of paths in $W$.)
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Then 
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$$\bc_*(M, \pi^\infty_{\le n}(W) \simeq \CM{M}{W}.$$
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\end{property}
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\begin{property}[Higher dimensional Deligne conjecture]
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The singular chains of the $n$-dimensional fat graph operad act on blob cochains.
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\end{property}
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See \S \ref{sec:deligne} for an explanation of the terms appearing here, and (in a later edition of this paper) the proof.
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Properties \ref{property:functoriality}, \ref{property:gluing-map} and \ref{property:skein-modules} will be immediate from the definition given in
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\S \ref{sec:blob-definition}, and we'll recall them at the appropriate points there. \todo{Make sure this gets done.}
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Properties \ref{property:disjoint-union} and \ref{property:contractibility} are established in \S \ref{sec:basic-properties}.
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Property \ref{property:hochschild} is established in \S \ref{sec:hochschild}, Property \ref{property:evaluation} in \S \ref{sec:evaluation},
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and Property \ref{property:gluing} in \S \ref{sec:gluing}.
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\nn{need to say where the remaining properties are proved.}
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\subsection{Future directions}
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\label{sec:future}
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Throughout, we have resisted the temptation to work in the greatest generality possible (don't worry, it wasn't that hard). 
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In most of the places where we say ``set" or ``vector space", any symmetric monoidal category would do.
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\nn{maybe make similar remark about chain complexes and $(\infty, 0)$-categories}
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More could be said about finite characteristic (there appears in be $2$-torsion in $\bc_1(S^2, \cC)$ for any spherical $2$-category $\cC$). Much more could be said about other types of manifolds, in particular oriented, $\operatorname{Spin}$ and $\operatorname{Pin}^{\pm}$ manifolds, where boundary issues become more complicated. (We'd recommend thinking about boundaries as germs, rather than just codimension $1$ manifolds.) We've also take the path of least resistance by considering $\operatorname{PL}$ manifolds; there may be some differences for topological manifolds and smooth manifolds.
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Many results in Hochschild homology can be understood `topologically' via the blob complex. For example, we expect that the shuffle product on the Hochschild homology of a commutative algebra $A$ simply corresponds to the gluing operation on $\bc_*(S^1 \times [0,1], A)$, but haven't investigated the details.
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Most importantly, however, \nn{applications!} \nn{$n=2$ cases, contact, Kh}
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\subsection{Thanks and acknowledgements}
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We'd like to thank David Ben-Zvi, Michael Freedman, Vaughan Jones, Justin Roberts, Chris Schommer-Pries, Peter Teichner \nn{probably lots more} for many interesting and useful conversations. During this work, Kevin Walker has been at Microsoft Station Q, and Scott Morrison has been at Microsoft Station Q and the Miller Institute for Basic Research at UC Berkeley.
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\medskip\hrule\medskip
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Still to do:
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\begin{itemize}
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\item say something about starting with semisimple n-cat (trivial?? not trivial?)
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\item Mention somewhere \cite{MR1624157} ``Skein homology''; it's not directly related, but has similar motivations.
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\end{itemize}
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