scholarly journals A factorization homology primer

2020 ◽  
pp. 39-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Ayala ◽  
John Francis
2012 ◽  
Vol 149 (3) ◽  
pp. 430-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Francis

AbstractIn this work, we study the deformation theory of${\mathcal {E}}_n$-rings and the${\mathcal {E}}_n$analogue of the tangent complex, or topological André–Quillen cohomology. We prove a generalization of a conjecture of Kontsevich, that there is a fiber sequence$A[n-1] \rightarrow T_A\rightarrow {\mathrm {HH}}^*_{{\mathcal {E}}_{n}}\!(A)[n]$, relating the${\mathcal {E}}_n$-tangent complex and${\mathcal {E}}_n$-Hochschild cohomology of an${\mathcal {E}}_n$-ring$A$. We give two proofs: the first is direct, reducing the problem to certain stable splittings of configuration spaces of punctured Euclidean spaces; the second is more conceptual, where we identify the sequence as the Lie algebras of a fiber sequence of derived algebraic groups,$B^{n-1}A^\times \rightarrow {\mathrm {Aut}}_A\rightarrow {\mathrm {Aut}}_{{\mathfrak B}^n\!A}$. Here${\mathfrak B}^n\!A$is an enriched$(\infty ,n)$-category constructed from$A$, and${\mathcal {E}}_n$-Hochschild cohomology is realized as the infinitesimal automorphisms of${\mathfrak B}^n\!A$. These groups are associated to moduli problems in${\mathcal {E}}_{n+1}$-geometry, a less commutative form of derived algebraic geometry, in the sense of the work of Toën and Vezzosi and the work of Lurie. Applying techniques of Koszul duality, this sequence consequently attains a nonunital${\mathcal {E}}_{n+1}$-algebra structure; in particular, the shifted tangent complex$T_A[-n]$is a nonunital${\mathcal {E}}_{n+1}$-algebra. The${\mathcal {E}}_{n+1}$-algebra structure of this sequence extends the previously known${\mathcal {E}}_{n+1}$-algebra structure on${\mathrm {HH}}^*_{{\mathcal {E}}_{n}}\!(A)$, given in the higher Deligne conjecture. In order to establish this moduli-theoretic interpretation, we make extensive use of factorization homology, a homology theory for framed$n$-manifolds with coefficients given by${\mathcal {E}}_n$-algebras, constructed as a topological analogue of Beilinson and Drinfeld’s chiral homology. We give a separate exposition of this theory, developing the necessary results used in our proofs.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 1045-1084 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Ayala ◽  
John Francis

2018 ◽  
Vol 333 ◽  
pp. 1042-1177 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Ayala ◽  
John Francis ◽  
Nick Rozenblyum

Author(s):  
Dennis Gaitsgory ◽  
Jacob Lurie

A central concern of number theory is the study of local-to-global principles, which describe the behavior of a global field K in terms of the behavior of various completions of K. This book looks at a specific example of a local-to-global principle: Weil's conjecture on the Tamagawa number of a semisimple algebraic group G over K. In the case where K is the function field of an algebraic curve X, this conjecture counts the number of G-bundles on X (global information) in terms of the reduction of G at the points of X (local information). The goal of this book is to give a conceptual proof of Weil's conjecture, based on the geometry of the moduli stack of G-bundles. Inspired by ideas from algebraic topology, it introduces a theory of factorization homology in the setting ℓ-adic sheaves. Using this theory, the authors articulate a different local-to-global principle: a product formula that expresses the cohomology of the moduli stack of G-bundles (a global object) as a tensor product of local factors. Using a version of the Grothendieck–Lefschetz trace formula, the book shows that this product formula implies Weil's conjecture. The proof of the product formula will appear in a sequel volume.


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