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"Diagram (category theory)"
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Congruence Lattices of Ideals in Categories and (Partial) Semigroups
2023
This monograph presents a unified framework for determining the congruences on a number of monoids and categories of transformations,
diagrams, matrices and braids, and on all their ideals. The key theoretical advances present an iterative process of stacking certain
normal subgroup lattices on top of each other to successively build congruence lattices of a chain of ideals. This is applied to several
specific categories of: transformations; order/orientation preserving/reversing transformations; partitions; planar/annular partitions;
Brauer, Temperley–Lieb and Jones partitions; linear and projective linear transformations; and partial braids. Special considerations
are needed for certain small ideals, and technically more intricate theoretical underpinnings for the linear and partial braid
categories.
Triangulated categories
2014
The first two chapters of this book offer a modern, self-contained exposition of the elementary theory of triangulated categories and their quotients. The simple, elegant presentation of these known results makes these chapters eminently suitable as a text for graduate students. The remainder of the book is devoted to new research, providing, among other material, some remarkable improvements on Brown's classical representability theorem. In addition, the author introduces a class of triangulated categories\"--the \"well generated triangulated categories\"--and studies their properties. This exercise is particularly worthwhile in that many examples of triangulated categories are well generated, and the book proves several powerful theorems for this broad class. These chapters will interest researchers in the fields of algebra, algebraic geometry, homotopy theory, and mathematical physics.
Higher topos theory
2009
Higher category theory is generally regarded as technical and forbidding, but part of it is considerably more tractable: the theory of infinity-categories, higher categories in which all higher morphisms are assumed to be invertible. InHigher Topos Theory, Jacob Lurie presents the foundations of this theory, using the language of weak Kan complexes introduced by Boardman and Vogt, and shows how existing theorems in algebraic topology can be reformulated and generalized in the theory's new language. The result is a powerful theory with applications in many areas of mathematics.
The book's first five chapters give an exposition of the theory of infinity-categories that emphasizes their role as a generalization of ordinary categories. Many of the fundamental ideas from classical category theory are generalized to the infinity-categorical setting, such as limits and colimits, adjoint functors, ind-objects and pro-objects, locally accessible and presentable categories, Grothendieck fibrations, presheaves, and Yoneda's lemma. A sixth chapter presents an infinity-categorical version of the theory of Grothendieck topoi, introducing the notion of an infinity-topos, an infinity-category that resembles the infinity-category of topological spaces in the sense that it satisfies certain axioms that codify some of the basic principles of algebraic topology. A seventh and final chapter presents applications that illustrate connections between the theory of higher topoi and ideas from classical topology.
Filtrations and Buildings
by
Cornut, Christophe
in
Buildings (Group theory)
,
Categories (Mathematics)
,
Filters (Mathematics)
2020
We construct and study a scheme theoretical version of the Tits vectorial building, relate it to filtrations on fiber functors, and
use them to clarify various constructions pertaining to affine Bruhat-Tits buildings, for which we also provide a Tannakian
description.
Arithmetic compactifications of PEL-type shimura varieties
2013
By studying the degeneration of abelian varieties with PEL structures, this book explains the compactifications of smooth integral models of all PEL-type Shimura varieties, providing the logical foundation for several exciting recent developments. The book is designed to be accessible to graduate students who have an understanding of schemes and abelian varieties.
PEL-type Shimura varieties, which are natural generalizations of modular curves, are useful for studying the arithmetic properties of automorphic forms and automorphic representations, and they have played important roles in the development of the Langlands program. As with modular curves, it is desirable to have integral models of compactifications of PEL-type Shimura varieties that can be described in sufficient detail near the boundary. This book explains in detail the following topics about PEL-type Shimura varieties and their compactifications:
A construction of smooth integral models of PEL-type Shimura varieties by defining and representing moduli problems of abelian schemes with PEL structuresAn analysis of the degeneration of abelian varieties with PEL structures into semiabelian schemes, over noetherian normal complete adic base ringsA construction of toroidal and minimal compactifications of smooth integral models of PEL-type Shimura varieties, with detailed descriptions of their structure near the boundary
Through these topics, the book generalizes the theory of degenerations of polarized abelian varieties and the application of that theory to the construction of toroidal and minimal compactifications of Siegel moduli schemes over the integers (as developed by Mumford, Faltings, and Chai).
Spaces of PL manifolds and categories of simple maps
by
Waldhausen, Friedhelm
,
Rognes, John
,
Jahren, Bjørn
in
Adjoint functors
,
Algebraic K-theory
,
Atlas (topology)
2013,2015
Since its introduction by Friedhelm Waldhausen in the 1970s, the algebraic K-theory of spaces has been recognized as the main tool for studying parametrized phenomena in the theory of manifolds. However, a full proof of the equivalence relating the two areas has not appeared until now. This book presents such a proof, essentially completing Waldhausen's program from more than thirty years ago.
The main result is a stable parametrized h-cobordism theorem, derived from a homotopy equivalence between a space of PL h-cobordisms on a space X and the classifying space of a category of simple maps of spaces having X as deformation retract. The smooth and topological results then follow by smoothing and triangulation theory.
The proof has two main parts. The essence of the first part is a \"desingularization,\" improving arbitrary finite simplicial sets to polyhedra. The second part compares polyhedra with PL manifolds by a thickening procedure. Many of the techniques and results developed should be useful in other connections.
Log-gases and random matrices
2010
Random matrix theory, both as an application and as a theory, has evolved rapidly over the past fifteen years.Log-Gases and Random Matricesgives a comprehensive account of these developments, emphasizing log-gases as a physical picture and heuristic, as well as covering topics such as beta ensembles and Jack polynomials.
Peter Forrester presents an encyclopedic development of log-gases and random matrices viewed as examples of integrable or exactly solvable systems. Forrester develops not only the application and theory of Gaussian and circular ensembles of classical random matrix theory, but also of the Laguerre and Jacobi ensembles, and their beta extensions. Prominence is given to the computation of a multitude of Jacobians; determinantal point processes and orthogonal polynomials of one variable; the Selberg integral, Jack polynomials, and generalized hypergeometric functions; Painlevé transcendents; macroscopic electrostatistics and asymptotic formulas; nonintersecting paths and models in statistical mechanics; and applications of random matrix theory. This is the first textbook development of both nonsymmetric and symmetric Jack polynomial theory, as well as the connection between Selberg integral theory and beta ensembles. The author provides hundreds of guided exercises and linked topics, makingLog-Gases and Random Matricesan indispensable reference work, as well as a learning resource for all students and researchers in the field.
Ecological niches and geographic distributions
by
Enrique Martínez-Meyer
,
Richard G. Pearson
,
Miguel Nakamura
in
Algorithm
,
American Museum of Natural History
,
Bastian
2011,2012
This book provides a first synthetic view of an emerging area of ecology and biogeography, linking individual- and population-level processes to geographic distributions and biodiversity patterns. Problems in evolutionary ecology, macroecology, and biogeography are illuminated by this integrative view. The book focuses on correlative approaches known as ecological niche modeling, species distribution modeling, or habitat suitability modeling, which use associations between known occurrences of species and environmental variables to identify environmental conditions under which populations can be maintained. The spatial distribution of environments suitable for the species can then be estimated: a potential distribution for the species. This approach has broad applicability to ecology, evolution, biogeography, and conservation biology, as well as to understanding the geographic potential of invasive species and infectious diseases, and the biological implications of climate change.
The authors lay out conceptual foundations and general principles for understanding and interpreting species distributions with respect to geography and environment. Focus is on development of niche models. While serving as a guide for students and researchers, the book also provides a theoretical framework to support future progress in the field.
A primer on mapping class groups (Princeton mathematical series)
2012,2011
The study of the mapping class group Mod(S) is a classical topic that is experiencing a renaissance. It lies at the juncture of geometry, topology, and group theory. This book explains as many important theorems, examples, and techniques as possible, quickly and directly, while at the same time giving full details and keeping the text nearly self-contained. The book is suitable for graduate students.
Advancing Tensor Theories
2025
This paper advances the foundations of tensor and category theories by introducing novel concepts and rigorous constructive proofs. We generalize tensor theory through the innovative notion of a generalised tensor index, a versatile framework that unifies diverse tensor indices, and explore its transformation properties. Using fractional derivatives, we provide a geometrical interpretation of these generalised tensors, revealing new insights into its structure. Additionally, we forge a deep connection between tensor and category theories, integrating sets, tensors, categories, and functors with extensions like partial differentiation and integration. This synthesis yields original constructs—setorial tensors, categorial tensors, and functorial tensors—which open uncharted pathways in mathematical analysis. Our contributions not only extend prior research but also significantly enhance tensor theory, category theory, set theory, logic, topology, algebraic geometry, foundations, and philosophy, with potential applications spanning physics, geometry, and beyond.
Journal Article