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April 28, 2020

Group Cohomology and Homotopy Fixed Points

Posted by John Baez

I now have a better understanding of crossed homomorphisms and why they show up so prominently in Gille and Szamuely’s Central Simple Algebras and Galois Cohomology. I told the tale of my enlightenment on Twitter. Basically I just read Qiaochu Yuan’s blog posts on this subject, and discovered that I’d been struggling to understand exactly the things he had figured out and written about:

But I didn’t say enough about what I learned, since Twitter is not so good for that. So let me do that now.

Posted at 1:34 AM UTC | Permalink | Followups (2)

Model Categories as a Chu Construction

Posted by Mike Shulman

A couple years ago I blogged about the polycategory of multivariable adjunctions and how it embeds in the 2-Chu construction Chu(Cat,Set)Chu(Cat,Set). After my talk at the ACT@UCR seminar this week, some folks were hanging out at the category theory zulip, and Reid Barton asked

The theory of model categories is self-dual. Is there some useful way to embed {model categories + Quillen adjunctions} in Chu(something) (similarly to how AdjAdj embeds in Chu(Cat,Set)Chu(Cat, Set))? Where “something” would be some flavor of “half a model category structure”, e.g., a cofibration category?

At first I thought the answer was “no”, but now I think it is “yes”. I don’t know whether the construction is good for anything, but I found it amusing, so I thought I would share.

Posted at 12:11 AM UTC | Permalink | Followups (3)

April 24, 2020

Crossed Homomorphisms

Posted by John Baez

While reading Gille and Szamuely’s Central Simple Algebras and Galois Cohomology I’m finding myself frustrated by my poor understanding of H 1H^1 in group cohomology.

Roughly speaking, H 2(G,A)H^2(G,A) classifies group extensions of a group GG by an abelian group AA on which it acts. H 3(G,A)H^3(G,A) classifies 2-group extensions of GG by an abelian group AA on which it acts. And so on —this continues on up forever. I love this story: I call it the layer-cake philosophy of cohomology. But I never figured out how H 1H^1 or H 0H^0 fit into this story!

If you blindly follow the pattern, H 1(G,A)H^1(G,A) should classify ways of extending a group GG by a group AA on which it acts to get a 0-group. But what does that mean? Is there any way to make it make sense? There must be.

(I won’t even try to think about H 0H^0 this way. Not today anyway.)

Posted at 9:02 PM UTC | Permalink | Followups (12)

April 16, 2020

Ultracategories and 2-Monads

Posted by David Corfield

We began a discussion of Jacob Lurie’s Ultracategories over here, in particular whether they may be construed as algebras for some 2-monad. Perhaps this topic deserves a post to itself, rather than appearing tucked at the end of a long and fascinating discussion about condensed/pyknotic mathematics.

I have just discovered a 1995 PhD thesis by Francisco Marmolejo, advised by Robert Paré, that’s very relevant. Unfortunately the only online access is to a very poor photocopy, here. Anyway, Marmolejo characterises Makkai’s ultracategories there in a 2-monadic way. This would still leave Lurie’s somewhat differently defined ultracategories on the to-do list.

There’s then a follow-up question of characterising any such 2-monads using the codensity monad construction if possible. There’s some ongoing codensity conversation over here.

Posted at 11:55 AM UTC | Permalink | Followups (9)

April 15, 2020

Online Seminar Lists

Posted by Tom Leinster

As you know, many online maths seminars are now running. You could fill your days with nothing but!

This short post is to note that there are now several websites where you can find very useful calendars of online seminars. Here are some of them:

This probably isn’t the first time that someone’s made a list of lists of online talks. Perhaps there are many such lists of lists. If so, you know what to do.

Posted at 11:40 PM UTC | Permalink | Followups (3)

April 9, 2020

Western Hemisphere Colloquium on Geometry and Physics

Posted by John Baez

Another online talk series: the Western Hemisphere Colloquium on Geometry and Physics (WHCGP). This biweekly online colloquium features geometers and physicists presenting current research on a wide range of topics in the interface of the two fields. The talks are aimed at a broad audience. They will take place via Zoom on alternate Mondays at 3pm Eastern, noon Pacific, 4pm BRT. (There will be no lecture on May 25, Memorial Day in the USA.) Each session features a 60 minute talk, followed by 15 minutes for questions and discussion. You may join the meeting 15 minutes in advance. Questions and comments may be submitted to the moderator via the chat interface during the talk, or presented in person during the Q&A session. These colloquia will be recorded and will be available on the WHCGP website asap after the event.

The first two talks are:

  • April 13, Edward Witten (IAS), Volumes and random matrices.

  • April 27, Kevin Costello (PI), Topological strings, twistors, and skyrmions.

Posted at 1:15 AM UTC | Permalink | Post a Comment

April 6, 2020

A Categorical View of Conditional Expectation

Posted by John Baez

I always like to see categories combined with probability theory and analysis. So I’m glad Prakash Panangaden did that in his talk at the ACT@UCR seminar. Afterwards we had discussions at the Category Theory Community Server, and you can see them here if you’re a member:

https://categorytheory.zulipchat.com/

You can see his slides here, or download a video here, or watch the video here.

Posted at 9:34 PM UTC | Permalink | Followups (1)

Structured Cospans and Petri Nets

Posted by John Baez

I’m giving a talk at the MIT Categories Seminar. It’ll be on Thursday April 9th, 12 noon Eastern Time.

You can see my talk live on YouTube here, with simultaneous discussion on the Category Theory Community Server. (To join this, click here; this link will expire in a while.) The talk will be recorded and remain available on YouTube.

You can already see the slides here.

Posted at 7:38 PM UTC | Permalink | Followups (3)

Category Theory Calendar

Posted by John Baez

There are now enough online events in category theory that a calendar is needed. And here it is!

It should show the times in your time zone, at least if you don’t prevent it from getting that information.

Posted at 7:09 PM UTC | Permalink | Followups (5)