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In mathematics, a local system (or a system of local coefficients) on a topological space X is a tool from algebraic topology which interpolates between cohomology with coefficients in a fixed abelian group A, and general sheaf cohomology in which coefficients vary from point to point. Local coefficient systems were introduced by Norman Steenrod in 1943.[1]

Local systems are the building blocks of more general tools, such as constructible and perverse sheaves.

Definition

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Let X be a topological space. A local system (of abelian groups/modules/...) on X is a locally constant sheaf (of abelian groups/modules...) on X. In other words, a sheaf is a local system if every point has an open neighborhood such that the restricted sheaf is isomorphic to the sheafification of some constant presheaf. [clarification needed]

Equivalent definitions

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Path-connected spaces

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If X is path-connected,[clarification needed] a local system of abelian groups has the same stalk at every point. There is a bijective correspondence between local systems on X and group homomorphisms

and similarly for local systems of modules. The map giving the local system is called the monodromy representation of .

Proof of equivalence

Take local system and a loop at x. It's easy to show that any local system on is constant. For instance, is constant. This gives an isomorphism , i.e. between and itself. Conversely, given a homomorphism , consider the constant sheaf on the universal cover of X. The deck-transform-invariant sections of gives a local system on X. Similarly, the deck-transform-ρ-equivariant sections give another local system on X: for a small enough open set U, it is defined as

where is the universal covering.

This shows that (for X path-connected) a local system is precisely a sheaf whose pullback to the universal cover of X is a constant sheaf.

This correspondence can be upgraded to an equivalence of categories between the category of local systems of abelian groups on X and the category of abelian groups endowed with an action of (equivalently, -modules).[2]

Stronger definition on non-connected spaces

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A stronger nonequivalent definition that works for non-connected X is: the following: a local system is a covariant functor

from the fundamental groupoid of to the category of modules over a commutative ring , where typically . This is equivalently the data of an assignment to every point a module along with a group representation such that the various are compatible with change of basepoint and the induced map on fundamental groups.

Examples

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Cohomology

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There are several ways to define the cohomology of a local system, called cohomology with local coefficients, which become equivalent under mild assumptions on X.

If X is paracompact and locally contractible, then .[3] If is the local system corresponding to L, then there is an identification compatible with the differentials,[4] so .

Generalization

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Local systems have a mild generalization to constructible sheaves -- a constructible sheaf on a locally path connected topological space is a sheaf such that there exists a stratification of

where is a local system. These are typically found by taking the cohomology of the derived pushforward for some continuous map . For example, if we look at the complex points of the morphism

then the fibers over

are the smooth plane curve given by , but the fibers over are . If we take the derived pushforward then we get a constructible sheaf. Over we have the local systems

while over we have the local systems

where is the genus of the plane curve (which is ).

Applications

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The cohomology with local coefficients in the module corresponding to the orientation covering can be used to formulate Poincaré duality for non-orientable manifolds: see Twisted Poincaré duality.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Steenrod, Norman E. (1943). "Homology with local coefficients". Annals of Mathematics. 44 (4): 610–627. doi:10.2307/1969099. MR 0009114.
  2. ^ Milne, James S. (2017). Introduction to Shimura Varieties. Proposition 14.7.
  3. ^ Bredon, Glen E. (1997). Sheaf Theory, Second Edition, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 25, Springer-Verlag. Chapter III, Theorem 1.1.
  4. ^ Hatcher, Allen (2001). Algebraic Topology, Cambridge University Press. Section 3.H.
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