Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Conventions and notation
- Chapter 1 Presheaves and their stalks
- Chapter 2 Sheaves and sheaf spaces
- Chapter 3 Morphisms of sheaves and presheaves
- Chapter 4 Ringed spaces
- Chapter 5 Cohomology
- The way ahead: further reading
- References
- Hints and answers to some exercises
- Index of terminology
- Index of notation
Chapter 3 - Morphisms of sheaves and presheaves
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Conventions and notation
- Chapter 1 Presheaves and their stalks
- Chapter 2 Sheaves and sheaf spaces
- Chapter 3 Morphisms of sheaves and presheaves
- Chapter 4 Ringed spaces
- Chapter 5 Cohomology
- The way ahead: further reading
- References
- Hints and answers to some exercises
- Index of terminology
- Index of notation
Summary
In this chapter we first give an account of the elementary language of category theory, and show how this gives a unified way of looking at many of the ideas we have been considering. We are led to look for convenient properties of the categories of sheaves and of presheaves over a given topological space, and we find that they each have a list of such properties which are summarised in the definition of abelian category.
However, the construction of cokernels differs in the two categories; this expresses what is perhaps the basic question in sheaf theory: to what extent does a sheaf epimorphism (a map of sheaves which is ‘locally’ surjective) have surjective section maps? This is studied further when we consider cohomology (Chapter 5).
Lastly, we consider what happens in a change of base space by a continuous map. We find that there is a covariant (that is, going in the same direction as the map) method of changing the base space of presheaves, and a contraviant (opposite direction) construction which is a generalisation of sheaf if ication. These are connected by an adjointness relation, which may be interpreted as expressing their universal nature. In the case of an inclusion map of a locally closed subspace, we also consider the process of extension by zero.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Sheaf Theory , pp. 31 - 72Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1975