Homotopy limit functors on model categories and homotopical categories
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Homotopy limit functors on model categories and homotopical categories
(Mathematical surveys and monographs, v. 113)
American Mathematical Society, c2004
- : pbk
Available at / 43 libraries
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Hokkaido University, Library, Graduate School of Science, Faculty of Science and School of Science図書
DC22:514.24/D9792080018970
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 181) and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
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ISBN 9780821837030
Description
The purpose of this monograph, which is aimed at the graduate level and beyond, is to obtain a deeper understanding of Quillen's model categories. A model category is a category together with three distinguished classes of maps, called weak equivalences, cofibrations, and fibrations. Model categories have become a standard tool in algebraic topology and homological algebra and, increasingly, in other fields where homotopy theoretic ideas are becoming important, such as algebraic $K$-theory and algebraic geometry. The authors' approach is to define the notion of a homotopical category, which is more general than that of a model category, and to consider model categories as special cases of this. A homotopical category is a category with only a single distinguished class of maps, called weak equivalences, subject to an appropriate axiom. This enables one to define "homotopical" versions of such basic categorical notions as initial and terminal objects, colimit and limit functors, cocompleteness and completeness, adjunctions, Kan extensions, and universal properties. There are two essentially self-contained parts, and part II logically precedes part I.
Part II defines and develops the notion of a homotopical category and can be considered as the beginnings of a kind of "relative" category theory. The results of part II are used in part I to obtain a deeper understanding of model categories. The authors show in particular that model categories are homotopically cocomplete and complete in a sense stronger than just the requirement of the existence of small homotopy colimit and limit functors. A reader of part II is assumed to have only some familiarity with the above-mentioned categorical notions. Those who read part I, and especially its introductory chapter, should also know something about model categories.
Table of Contents
- Model categories and their homotopy categories
- Quillen functors
- Homotopical cocompleteness and completeness of model categories
- Homotopical categories and homotopical functors
- Deformable functors and their approximations
- Homotopy colimit and limit functors and homotopical ones
- Index
- Bibliography
- Volume
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: pbk ISBN 9780821839751
Description
The purpose of this monograph, which is aimed at the graduate level and beyond, is to obtain a deeper understanding of Quillen's model categories. A model category is a category together with three distinguished classes of maps, called weak equivalences, cofibrations, and fibrations. Model categories have become a standard tool in algebraic topology and homological algebra and, increasingly, in other fields where homotopy theoretic ideas are becoming important, such as algebraic $K$-theory and algebraic geometry.The authors' approach is to define the notion of a homotopical category, which is more general than that of a model category, and to consider model categories as special cases of this. A homotopical category is a category with only a single distinguished class of maps, called weak equivalences, subject to an appropriate axiom. This enables one to define ""homotopical"" versions of such basic categorical notions as initial and terminal objects, colimit and limit functors, cocompleteness and completeness, adjunctions, Kan extensions, and universal properties.There are two essentially self-contained parts, and part II logically precedes part I. Part II defines and develops the notion of a homotopical category and can be considered as the beginnings of a kind of ""relative"" category theory. The results of part II are used in part I to obtain a deeper understanding of model categories. The authors show in particular that model categories are homotopically cocomplete and complete in a sense stronger than just the requirement of the existence of small homotopy colimit and limit functors. A reader of part II is assumed to have only some familiarity with the above-mentioned categorical notions. Those who read part I, and especially its introductory chapter, should also know something about model categories.
Table of Contents
Model categories: An overview Model categories and their homotopy categories Quillen functors Homotopical cocompleteness and completeness of model categories Homotopical categories: Summary of part II Homotopical categories and homotopical functors Deformable functors and their approximations Homotopy colimit and limit functors and homotopical ones Index Bibliography.
by "Nielsen BookData"