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In mathematics, derivators are a proposed frameworkpg 190-195 for homological algebra giving a foundation for both abelian and non-abelian homological algebra and various generalizations of it. They were introduced to address the deficiencies of
derived categories In mathematics, the derived category ''D''(''A'') of an abelian category ''A'' is a construction of homological algebra introduced to refine and in a certain sense to simplify the theory of derived functors defined on ''A''. The construction proce ...
(such as the non-functoriality of the cone construction) and provide at the same time a language for
homotopical algebra In mathematics, homotopical algebra is a collection of concepts comprising the ''nonabelian'' aspects of homological algebra as well as possibly the abelian aspects as special cases. The ''homotopical'' nomenclature stems from the fact that a ...
. Derivators were first introduced by Alexander Grothendieck in his long unpublished 1983 manuscript '' Pursuing Stacks''. They were then further developed by him in the huge unpublished 1991 manuscript ''Les Dérivateurs'' of almost 2000 pages. Essentially the same concept was introduced (apparently independently) by Alex Heller. The manuscript has been edited for on-line publication by Georges Maltsiniotis. The theory has been further developed by several other people, including Heller, Franke, Keller and Groth.


Motivations

One of the motivating reasons for considering derivators is the lack of functoriality with the cone construction with
triangulated categories In mathematics, a triangulated category is a category with the additional structure of a "translation functor" and a class of "exact triangles". Prominent examples are the derived category of an abelian category, as well as the stable homotopy cate ...
. Derivators are able to solve this problem, and solve the inclusion of general
homotopy colimit In mathematics, especially in algebraic topology, the homotopy limit and colimitpg 52 are variants of the notions of limit and colimit extended to the homotopy category \text(\textbf). The main idea is this: if we have a diagramF: I \to \textbfc ...
s, by keeping track of all possible diagrams in a category with weak equivalences and their relations between each other. Heuristically, given the diagram
\bullet \to \bullet
which is a category with two objects and one non-identity arrow, and a functor
F:(\bullet \to \bullet) \to A
to a category A with a class of weak-equivalences W (and satisfying the right hypotheses), we should have an associated functor
C(F): \bullet \to A ^/math>
where the target object is unique up to weak equivalence in \mathcal ^/math>. Derivators are able to encode this kind of information and provide a diagram calculus to use in
derived categories In mathematics, the derived category ''D''(''A'') of an abelian category ''A'' is a construction of homological algebra introduced to refine and in a certain sense to simplify the theory of derived functors defined on ''A''. The construction proce ...
and homotopy theory.


Definition


Prederivators

Formally, a prederivator \mathbb is a 2-functor
\mathbb: \text^ \to \text
from a suitable 2-category of indices to the category of categories. Typically such 2-functors come from considering the categories \underline(I^, A) where A is called the category of coefficients. For example, \text could be the category of small categories which are filtered, whose objects can be thought of as the indexing sets for a
filtered colimit In category theory, filtered categories generalize the notion of directed set understood as a category (hence called a directed category; while some use directed category as a synonym for a filtered category). There is a dual notion of cofiltered ...
. Then, given a morphism of diagrams
f:I \to J
denote f^* by
f^*:\mathbb(J) \to \mathbb(I)
This is called the inverse image functor. In the motivating example, this is just precompositition, so given a functor F_I \in \underline(I^, A) there is an associated functor F_J = F_I \circ f. Note these 2-functors could be taken to be
\underline(-,A ^
where W is a suitable class of weak equivalences in a category A.


Indexing categories

There are a number of examples of indexing categories which can be used in this construction * The 2-category \text of finite categories, so the objects are categories whose collection of objects are finite sets. * The ordinal category \Delta can be categorified into a two category, where the objects are categories with one object, and the functors come form the arrows in the ordinal category. * Another option is to just use the category of small categories. * In addition, associated to any topological space X is a category \text(X) which could be used as the indexing category. *Moreover, the sites underlying the Zariksi, Etale, etc, topoi of (X)_\tau for some scheme or
algebraic space In mathematics, algebraic spaces form a generalization of the schemes of algebraic geometry, introduced by Michael Artin for use in deformation theory. Intuitively, schemes are given by gluing together affine schemes using the Zariski topology, wh ...
X along with their morphisms can be used for the indexing category * This can be generalized to any topos T, so the indexing category is the underlying site.


Derivators

Derivators are then the axiomatization of prederivators which come equipped with adjoint functors :f^? \dashv f_! \dashv f^* \dashv f_* \dashv f^! where f_! is left adjoint to f^* and so on. Heuristically, f_* should correspond to inverse limits, f_! to colimits.


References


Bibliography

* * *


External links


derivator
in nLab
Subtopoi, open subtopos and closed subtopos
*https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2018/03/stabilization_of_derivators.html Homotopical algebra Homological algebra {{algebra-stub