Abelian 2-group
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In
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 ...
, an Abelian 2-group is a higher dimensional analogue of an
Abelian group In mathematics, an abelian group, also called a commutative group, is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written. That is, the group operation is commut ...
, in the sense of higher algebra, which were originally introduced by Alexander Grothendieck while studying abstract structures surrounding
Abelian varieties In mathematics, particularly in algebraic geometry, complex analysis and algebraic number theory, an abelian variety is a projective algebraic variety that is also an algebraic group, i.e., has a group law that can be defined by regular function ...
and
Picard group In mathematics, the Picard group of a ringed space ''X'', denoted by Pic(''X''), is the group of isomorphism classes of invertible sheaves (or line bundles) on ''X'', with the group operation being tensor product. This construction is a global ve ...
s. More concretely, they are given by groupoids \mathbb which have a
bifunctor In mathematics, specifically category theory, a functor is a mapping between categories. Functors were first considered in algebraic topology, where algebraic objects (such as the fundamental group) are associated to topological spaces, and ma ...
+:\mathbb\times\mathbb \to \mathbb which acts formally like the addition an Abelian group. Namely, the bifunctor + has a notion of commutativity, associativity, and an identity structure. Although this seems like a rather lofty and abstract structure, there are several (very concrete) examples of Abelian 2-groups. In fact, some of which provide prototypes for more complex examples of higher algebraic structures, such as Abelian n-groups.


Definition

An Abelian 2-group is a groupoid \mathbb with a bifunctor +:\mathbb\times\mathbb \to \mathbb and natural transformations
\begin \tau: & X+Y \Rightarrow Y + X \\ \sigma: & (X+Y)+Z \Rightarrow X+(Y+Z) \end
which satisfy a host of axioms ensuring these transformations behave similarly to commutativity (\tau) and associativity (\sigma) for an Abelian group. One of the motivating examples of such a category comes from the Picard category of line bundles on a scheme (see below).


Examples


Picard category

For a
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or
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X, there is an Abelian 2-group \textbf(X) whose objects are line bundles \mathcal and morphisms are given by isomorphisms of line bundles. Notice over a given line bundle \mathcal
\text(\mathcal) = \text(\mathcal) \cong \mathcal_X^*
since the only automorphisms of a line bundle are given by a non-vanishing function on X. The additive structure + is given by the tensor product \otimes on the line bundles. This makes is more clear why there should be natural transformations instead of equality of functors. For example, we only have an isomorphism of line bundles
\mathcal\otimes\mathcal' \cong \mathcal'\otimes\mathcal
but not direct equality. This isomorphism is independent of the line bundles chosen and are functorial hence they give the natural transformation
\tau: (-\otimes -) \to (-\otimes -)
switching the components. The associativity similarly follows from the associativity of tensor products of line bundles.


Two term chain complexes

Another source for Picard categories is from two-term chain complexes of Abelian groups
A^ \xrightarrow A^0
which have a canonical groupoid structure associated to them. We can write the set of objects as the abelian group A^0 and the set of arrows as the set A^\oplus A^0. Then, the source morphism s of an arrow (a_,a_0) is the projection map
s(a_ + a_0) = a_0
and the target morphism t is
t(a_+a_0) = d(a_) + a_0
Notice this definition implies the automorphism group of any object a_0 is \text(d). Notice that if we repeat this construction for sheaves of abelian groups over a
site Site most often refers to: * Archaeological site * Campsite, a place used for overnight stay in an outdoor area * Construction site * Location, a point or an area on the Earth's surface or elsewhere * Website, a set of related web pages, typically ...
X (or topological space), we get a sheaf of Abelian 2-groups. It could be conjectured if this can be used to construct all such categories, but this is not the case. In fact, this construction must be generalized to spectra to give a precise generalization pg 88.


Example of Abelian 2-group in algebraic geometry

One example is the
Cotangent complex In mathematics, the cotangent complex is a common generalisation of the cotangent sheaf, normal bundle and virtual tangent bundle of a map of geometric spaces such as manifolds or schemes. If f: X \to Y is a morphism of geometric or algebraic o ...
for a local complete intersection scheme X which is given by the two-term complex
\mathbf_^\bullet = i^*I/I^2 \to i^*\Omega_Y
for an embedding i:X \to Y. There is a direct categorical interpretation of this Abelian 2-group from deformation theory using the
Exalcomm In algebra, Exalcomm is a functor classifying the extensions of a commutative algebra by a module. More precisely, the elements of Exalcomm''k''(''R'',''M'') are isomorphism classes of commutative ''k''-algebras ''E'' with a homomorphism onto the '' ...
category. Note that in addition to using a 2-term chain complex, would could instead consider a chain complex A^\bullet \in Ch^(\text) and construct an Abelian n-group (or infinity-group).


Abelian 2-group of morphisms

For a pair of Abelian 2-groups \mathbb,\mathbb' there is an associated Abelian 2-group of morphisms
\text(\mathbb,\mathbb')
whose objects are given by functors between these two categories, and the arrows are given by natural transformations. Moreover, the bifunctor +' on \mathbb' induces a bifunctor structure on this groupoid, giving it an Abelian 2-group structure.


Classifying abelian 2-groups

On order to classify abelian 2-groups, strict picard categories using two-term chain complexes is not enough. One approach is in stable homotopy theory using spectra which only have two non-trivial homotopy groups. While studying an arbitrary Picard category, it becomes clear that there is additional data used to classify the structure of the category, it is given by the Postnikov invariant.


Postnikov invariant

For an Abelian 2-group \mathbb and a fixed object x \in \text(\mathbb) the isomorphisms of the functors x+(-) and (-)+x given by the commutativity arrow
\tau : x + x \Rightarrow x+x
gives an element of the automorphism group \text_\mathbb(x) which squares to 1, hence is contained in some \mathbb/2. Sometimes this is suggestively written as \pi_1(\mathbb). We can call this element \varepsilon and this invariant induces a morphism from the isomorphism classes of objects in \mathbb, denoted \pi_0(\mathbb), to \text_\mathbb(x), i.e. it gives a morphism
\varepsilon: \pi_0(\mathbb)\otimes\mathbb/2 \to \pi_1(\mathbb) = \text_(x)
which corresponds to the Postnikov invariant. In particular, every Picard category given as a two-term chain complex has \varepsilon = 0 because they correspond under the Dold-Kan correspondence to simplicial abelian groups with topological realizations as the product of Eilenberg-Maclane spaces
K(H^(A^\bullet), 1)\times K(H^0(A^\bullet),0)
For example, if we have a Picard category with \pi_1(\mathbb) = \mathbb/2 and \pi_0(\mathbb) = \mathbb, there is no chain complex of Abelian groups giving these homology groups since \mathbb/2 can only be given by a projection
\mathbb\xrightarrow \mathbb \to \mathbb/2
Instead this Picard category can be understood as a categorical realization of the truncated spectrum \tau_ \mathbb{S} of the
sphere spectrum In stable homotopy theory, a branch of mathematics, the sphere spectrum ''S'' is the monoidal unit in the category of spectra. It is the suspension spectrum of ''S''0, i.e., a set of two points. Explicitly, the ''n''th space in the sphere spectrum ...
where the only two non-trivial homotopy groups of the spectrum are in degrees 0 and 1.


See also

*
∞-groupoid In category theory, a branch of mathematics, an ∞-groupoid is an abstract homotopical model for topological spaces. One model uses Kan complexes which are fibrant objects in the category of simplicial sets (with the standard model structure). It ...
*
N-group (category theory) In mathematics, an ''n''-group, or ''n''-dimensional higher group, is a special kind of ''n''-category that generalises the concept of group to higher-dimensional algebra. Here, n may be any natural number or infinity. The thesis of Alexander G ...
*
Gerbe In mathematics, a gerbe (; ) is a construct in homological algebra and topology. Gerbes were introduced by Jean Giraud (mathematician), Jean Giraud following ideas of Alexandre Grothendieck as a tool for non-commutative cohomology in degree 2. Th ...


References


Thesis of Hoàng Xuân Sính (Gr Categories)
* On Abelian 2-categories and Derived 2-functors * Cohomology with coefficients in stacks of Picard categories * Cohomology with values in a sheaf of crossed groups over a site - gives techniques for defining sheaf cohomology with coefficients in a crossed module, or a Picard category * Modelling Stable one-types - exposition of stable 1-types containing relation with picard categories * Stable Postnikov data of Picard 2-categories Abelian group theory Algebraic topology Homological algebra