A¹ Homotopy Theory
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In
algebraic geometry Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics, classically studying zeros of multivariate polynomials. Modern algebraic geometry is based on the use of abstract algebraic techniques, mainly from commutative algebra, for solving geometrical ...
and
algebraic topology Algebraic topology is a branch of mathematics that uses tools from abstract algebra to study topological spaces. The basic goal is to find algebraic invariant (mathematics), invariants that classification theorem, classify topological spaces up t ...
, branches of
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, homotopy theory or motivic homotopy theory is a way to apply the techniques of algebraic topology, specifically
homotopy In topology, a branch of mathematics, two continuous functions from one topological space to another are called homotopic (from grc, ὁμός "same, similar" and "place") if one can be "continuously deformed" into the other, such a deforma ...
, to algebraic varieties and, more generally, to schemes. The theory is due to
Fabien Morel Fabien Morel (born 22 January 1965, in Reims) is a French algebraic geometer and key developer of A¹ homotopy theory with Vladimir Voevodsky. Among his accomplishments is the proof of the Friedlander conjecture, and the proof of the complex cas ...
and Vladimir Voevodsky. The underlying idea is that it should be possible to develop a purely algebraic approach to homotopy theory by replacing the
unit interval In mathematics, the unit interval is the closed interval , that is, the set of all real numbers that are greater than or equal to 0 and less than or equal to 1. It is often denoted ' (capital letter ). In addition to its role in real analysis, ...
, which is not an algebraic variety, with the
affine line In mathematics, an affine space is a geometric structure that generalizes some of the properties of Euclidean spaces in such a way that these are independent of the concepts of distance and measure of angles, keeping only the properties related ...
, which is. The theory has seen spectacular applications such as Voevodsky's construction of the derived category of mixed motives and the proof of the Milnor and Bloch-Kato conjectures.


Construction

homotopy theory is founded on a category called the homotopy category \mathcal(S). Simply put, the homotopy category, or rather the canonical functor Sm_S \to \mathcal(S), is the
universal Universal is the adjective for universe. Universal may also refer to: Companies * NBCUniversal, a media and entertainment company ** Universal Animation Studios, an American Animation studio, and a subsidiary of NBCUniversal ** Universal TV, a t ...
functor from the category Sm_S of smooth S-schemes towards an
infinity category In mathematics, more specifically category theory, a quasi-category (also called quasicategory, weak Kan complex, inner Kan complex, infinity category, ∞-category, Boardman complex, quategory) is a generalization of the notion of a category. T ...
which satisfies Nisnevich descent, such that the affine line becomes contractible. Here S is some prechosen base scheme (e.g., the spectrum of the complex numbers Spec(\mathbb C)). This definition in terms of a universal property is not possible without infinity categories. These were not available in the 90's and the original definition passes by way of Quillen's theory of
model categories In mathematics, particularly in homotopy theory, a model category is a category theory, category with distinguished classes of morphisms ('arrows') called 'weak equivalence (homotopy theory), weak equivalences', 'fibrations' and 'cofibrations' sati ...
. Another way of seeing the situation is that Morel-Voevodsky's original definition produces a concrete model for (the homotopy category of) the infinity category \mathcal(S). This more concrete construction is sketched below.


Step 0

Choose a base scheme S. Classically, S is asked to be Noetherian, but many modern authors such as Marc Hoyois work with quasi-compact quasi-separated base schemes. In any case, many important results are only known over a perfect base field, such as the complex numbers, it's perfectly fine to consider only this case.


Step 1

''Step 1a: Nisnevich sheaves''. Classically, the construction begins with the category Shv(Sm_S)_ of Nisnevich sheaves on the category Sm_S of smooth schemes over S. Heuristically, this should be considered as (and in a precise technical sense is) the universal enlargement of Sm_S obtained by adjoining all colimits and forcing Nisnevich descent to be satisfied. ''Step 1b: simplicial sheaves''. In order to more easily perform standard homotopy theoretic procedures such as homotopy colimits and homotopy limits, Shv_(Sm_S) replaced with the following category of simplicial sheaves. Let be the
simplex category In mathematics, the simplex category (or simplicial category or nonempty finite ordinal category) is the category of non-empty finite ordinals and order-preserving maps. It is used to define simplicial and cosimplicial objects. Formal definition ...
, that is, the category whose objects are the sets : and whose morphisms are order-preserving functions. We let \Delta^Shv(Sm_S)_ denote the category of functors \Delta^ \to Shv(Sm_S)_. That is, \Delta^Shv(Sm_S)_ is the category of simplicial objects on Shv(Sm_S)_. Such an object is also called a ''simplicial sheaf'' on Sm_S. ''Step 1c: fibre functors''. For any smooth S-scheme X, any point x \in X, and any sheaf F, let's write x^*F for the stalk of the restriction F, _ of F to the small Nisnevich site of X. Explicitly, x^*F = colim_ F(V) where the colimit is over factorisations x \to V \to X of the canonical inclusion x \to X via an étale morphism V \to X. The collection \ is a conservative family of fibre functors for Shv(Sm_S)_. ''Step 1d: the closed model structure''. We will define a closed model structure on \Delta^Shv(Sm_S)_ in terms of fibre functors. Let f : \mathcal \to \mathcal be a morphism of simplicial sheaves. We say that: * is a ''weak equivalence'' if, for any fibre functor of , the morphism of simplicial sets x^*f : x^*\mathcal \to x^*\mathcal is a weak equivalence. * is a ''cofibration'' if it is a monomorphism. * is a ''fibration'' if it has the
right lifting property In mathematics, in particular in category theory, the lifting property is a property of a pair of morphisms in a category. It is used in homotopy theory within algebraic topology to define properties of morphisms starting from an explicitly given c ...
with respect to any cofibration which is a weak equivalence. The homotopy category of this model structure is denoted \mathcal_s(T).


Step 2

This model structure has Nisnevich descent, but it does not contract the affine line. A simplicial sheaf \mathcal is called \mathbb A^1-local if for any simplicial sheaf \mathcal the map :\text_(\mathcal \times \mathbb A^1, \mathcal) \to \text_(\mathcal, \mathcal) induced by i_0: \ \to \mathbb A^1 is a bijection. Here we are considering \mathbb A^1 as a sheaf via the
Yoneda embedding In mathematics, the Yoneda lemma is arguably the most important result in category theory. It is an abstract result on functors of the type ''morphisms into a fixed object''. It is a vast generalisation of Cayley's theorem from group theory (viewi ...
, and the constant simplicial object functor Shv(Sm_S)_ \to \Delta^Shv(Sm_S)_. A morphism f : \mathcal \to \mathcal is an \mathbb A^1-weak equivalence if for any \mathbb A^1-local \mathcal, the induced map :\text_ (\mathcal, \mathcal) \to \text_ (\mathcal, \mathcal) is a bijection. The \mathbb A^1-local model structure is the localisation of the above model with respect to \mathbb A^1-weak equivalences.


Formal Definition

Finally we may define the homotopy category. :Definition. Let be a finite-dimensional Noetherian scheme (for example S = Spec(\mathbb C) the spectrum of the complex numbers), and let denote the category of smooth schemes over . Equip with the
Nisnevich topology In algebraic geometry, the Nisnevich topology, sometimes called the completely decomposed topology, is a Grothendieck topology on the category of schemes which has been used in algebraic K-theory, A¹ homotopy theory, and the theory of motives. It ...
to get the site . The homotopy category (or infinity category) associated to the \mathbb A^1-local model structure on \Delta^Shv_*(Sm_S)_ is called the -homotopy category. It is denoted \mathcal_s. Similarly, for the pointed simplicial sheaves \Delta^Shv_*(Sm_S)_ there is an associated pointed homotopy category \mathcal_. Note that by construction, for any in , there is an isomorphism : in the homotopy category.


Properties of the theory


Wedge and smash products of simplicial (pre)sheaves

Because we started with a simplicial model category to construct the \mathbf^1-homotopy category, there are a number of structures inherited from the abstract theory of simplicial models categories. In particular, for \mathcal,\mathcal pointed simplicial sheaves in \Delta^\text_*(\text/S)_ we can form the wedge product as the colimit
\mathcal\vee \mathcal = \underset\left\
and the smash product is defined as
\mathcal\wedge \mathcal = \mathcal\times \mathcal / \mathcal\vee \mathcal
recovering some of the classical constructions in homotopy theory. There is in addition a cone of a simplicial (pre)sheaf and a cone of a morphism, but defining these requires the definition of the simplicial spheres.


Simplicial spheres

From the fact we start with a simplicial model category, this means there is a cosimplicial functor
\Delta^\bullet: \Delta \to \Delta^_(/S)_
defining the simplices in \Delta^\text_*(\text/S)_. Recall the algebraic n-simplex is given by the S-scheme
\Delta^n = \text\left( \frac \right)
Embedding these schemes as constant presheaves and sheafifying gives objects in \Delta^\text_*(\text/S)_, which we denote by \Delta^n. These are the objects in the image of \Delta^\bullet( , i.e. \Delta^\bullet( = \Delta^n. Then using abstract simplicial homotopy theory, we get the simplicial spheres
S^n = \Delta^n/\partial\Delta^n
We can then form the cone of a simplicial (pre)sheaf as
C(\mathcal) = \mathcal\wedge \Delta^1
and form the cone of a morphism f:\mathcal \to \mathcal as the colimit of the diagram
C(f) = \underset\left\
In addition, the cofiber of \mathcal \to C(f) is simply the suspension \mathcal\wedge S^1 = \Sigma \mathcal. In the pointed homotopy category there is additionally the suspension functor
\Sigma: \mathcal_(Sm/S)_ \to \mathcal_(Sm/S)_ given by \Sigma(\mathcal) = \mathcal\wedge S^1
and its right adjoint
\Omega: \mathcal_(Sm/S)_\to \mathcal_(Sm/S)_
called the loop space functor.


Remarks

The setup, especially the
Nisnevich topology In algebraic geometry, the Nisnevich topology, sometimes called the completely decomposed topology, is a Grothendieck topology on the category of schemes which has been used in algebraic K-theory, A¹ homotopy theory, and the theory of motives. It ...
, is chosen as to make algebraic K-theory representable by a spectrum, and in some aspects to make a proof of the Bloch-Kato conjecture possible. After the Morel-Voevodsky construction there have been several different approaches to homotopy theory by using other model category structures or by using other sheaves than Nisnevich sheaves (for example, Zariski sheaves or just all presheaves). Each of these constructions yields the same homotopy category. There are two kinds of spheres in the theory: those coming from the multiplicative group playing the role of the -sphere in topology, and those coming from the simplicial sphere (considered as constant simplicial sheaf). This leads to a theory of motivic spheres with two indices. To compute the homotopy groups of motivic spheres would also yield the classical stable homotopy groups of the spheres, so in this respect homotopy theory is at least as complicated as classical homotopy theory.


Motivic analogies


Eilenberg-Maclane spaces

For an abelian group A the (p,q)-motivic cohomology of a smooth scheme X is given by the sheaf hypercohomology groups
H^(X,A):= \mathbb^(X_, A(q))
for A(q) = \mathbb(q)\otimes A. Representing this cohomology is a simplicial abelian sheaf denoted K(p,q,A) corresponding to A(q) p/math> which is considered as an object in the pointed motivic homotopy category H_\bullet(k). Then, for a smooth scheme X we have the equivalence
\text_(X_+, K(p,q,A)) = H^(X,A)
showing these sheaves represent motivic Eilenberg-Maclane spacespg 3.


The stable homotopy category

A further construction in A1-homotopy theory is the category SH(''S''), which is obtained from the above unstable category by forcing the smash product with Gm to become invertible. This process can be carried out either using model-categorical constructions using so-called Gm-spectra or alternatively using infinity-categories. For ''S'' = Spec (R), the spectrum of the field of real numbers, there is a functor :SH(\mathbf R) \to SH to the stable homotopy category from algebraic topology. The functor is characterized by sending a smooth scheme ''X'' / R to the real manifold associated to ''X''. This functor has the property that it sends the map :\rho: S^0 \to \mathbf G_m, i.e., \ \to Spec \mathbf R
, x^ The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
/math> to an equivalence, since \mathbf R^\times is homotopy equivalent to a two-point set. has shown that the resulting functor :SH(\mathbf R) rho^\to SH is an equivalence.


References


Survey articles and lectures

* Morel (2002
An Introduction to A1-homotopy theory
*


Motivic homotopy


Foundations

* Motivic stable homotopy groups * * * Voevodsky, Vladimir (2008) " Unstable motivic homotopy categories in Nisnevich and cdh-topologies"


Motivic Steenrod algebra

* Voevodsky, Vladimir (2001) " Reduced power operations in motivic cohomology" * Voevodsky, Vladimir (2008) " Motivic Eilenberg-Maclane spaces"


Motivic adams spectral sequence


The motivic Adams spectral sequence

Motivic chromatic homotopy theory


Spectra

* Jardine. (1999
Motivic Symmetric Spectra


Bloch-Kato


The Gersten conjecture for Milnor K-theory

Tate twists and cohomology of P1


Applications

* The motivic Steenrod algebra in positive characteristic * Motivic stable homotopy groups
On the Motivic \pi_0 of the Sphere Spectrum
(Springer) * The first stable homotopy groups of the motivic sphere * On the zero slice of the sphere spectrum * Vanishing in stable motivic homotopy sheaves


References

* {{DEFAULTSORT:A Homotopy Theory Algebraic geometry Homotopy theory