Higher categories, polygraphs and homotopy
Friday May 8, 2020, 2PM, * à distance *
Cameron Calk (LIX) Coherent confluence in modal n-Kleene algebras
Higher categories, polygraphs and homotopy
Friday April 17, 2020, 2PM, * à distance *
Chaitanya Leena-Subramaniam (IRIF) The small object argument for unique factorisation systems and the “plus” construction for sheaves (j.w.w. Mathieu Anel)
The small object argument of Quillen is a well-known construction of the weak factorisation system generated “on the left” by a small set of arrows of a category.
We recall a variant of the small object argument, essentially due to Kelly, that constructs the unique factorisation system (^\bot(W^\bot), W^\bot) generated by a small diagram W of morphisms of a locally presentable category C. Our main result shows that, given sufficient conditions on W (called a “pre-modulator”), Kelly's construction simplifies so that the unique factorisation of any morphism is given by iterating a “plus construction” generalising the one known from sheafification. Further, any small diagram can be replaced with a pre-modulator that generates the same unique factorisation system. Thus we show that every accessible reflective localisation of a locally presentable category can be calculated as a transfinite iteration of a plus construction. The classical plus construction for Grothendieck sites is a particular case, given by the pre-modulator (in fact a lex modulator) corresponding to the Grothendieck topology (seen as a diagram of sub-representables).
We also define “modulators” (resp. “lex modulators”) and prove that their corresponding unique factorisation systems are modalities (resp. lex modalities). It makes sense to see lex modulators as the correct generalisation of the notion of Grothendieck topology from 1-categories to ∞-categories, since every left-exact localisation (topological or not) of an ∞-topos can be obtained from a lex modulator. We show moreover that the plus construction associated to any lex modulator on an ∞-topos converges after (n+2) iterations when applied to an n-truncated object. This explains why the usual plus construction for 1-topoi converges after 2 iterations. The talk will present the main results and examples, without going into much detail of the demonstrations.
Higher categories, polygraphs and homotopy
Friday February 28, 2020, 2PM, Salle 1007
Sebastian Posur (Universität Siegen) Methods of constructive category theory
Higher categories, polygraphs and homotopy
Thursday February 27, 2020, 2PM, Salle 1012
Michael Batanin (IHES) Comparing symmetric operads and operadic categories
In my talk I will show that the category of symmetric operads in Set (variation of colours is allowed) is a reflective subcategory of the category of operadic categories. The inclusion is given by (operadic) Grothendieck construction and the reflection is given by evaluation of the left Kan extension along arity functor on the terminal operad. Thus the notion of operadic category can be considered as a flexible extension of the notion of symmetric operad.
Moreover, there is yet another functor from operadic categories to symmetric operads which sends an operadic category O to a symmetric operad in Set whose algebras are exactly O-operads. These three functors (Grothendieck construction, its left adjoint and free operad functor) fit in a nice picture with a universal property. In particular, they various composites generate the Baez-Dolan +-constructions for both symmetric operads and operadic categories.
*Attention : date et salle inhabituelles !*
Higher categories, polygraphs and homotopy
Friday February 7, 2020, 2PM, Salle 1007
Nima Rasekh (EPFL/IHES) Fibrations for Segal Spaces
For quasi-categories, a popular model of (oo,1)-categories, fibrations have been studied carefully by Joyal and Lurie and are commonly used in all kinds of categorical constructions.
In this talk we define and study left fibrations for another model of (oo,1)-categories, namely complete Segal spaces. We will show that these fibrations come with a model structure and that we can characterize the fibrant objects and the equivalences of the model structure, which allows us to prove many strong results about such fibrations without ever translating to functors.
If time permits we will discuss one particular strength of this approach to the theory of fibrations, namely how it can be generalized to fibrations for the (oo,n)-categorical analogue of complete Segal spaces: n-fold Segal spaces.
Higher categories, polygraphs and homotopy
Friday January 17, 2020, 2PM, Salle 1007
Johan Leray (LAGA-Université Paris 13) La propérade encodant les algèbres double Poisson est de Koszul