Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Sheaf Theory through Examples
View through CrossRef
An approachable introduction to elementary sheaf theory and its applications beyond pure math.
Sheaves are mathematical constructions concerned with passages from local properties to global ones. They have played a fundamental role in the development of many areas of modern mathematics, yet the broad conceptual power of sheaf theory and its wide applicability to areas beyond pure math have only recently begun to be appreciated. Taking an applied category theory perspective, Sheaf Theory through Examples provides an approachable introduction to elementary sheaf theory and examines applications including n-colorings of graphs, satellite data, chess problems, Bayesian networks, self-similar groups, musical performance, complexes, and much more.
With an emphasis on developing the theory via a wealth of well-motivated and vividly illustrated examples, Sheaf Theory through Examples supplements the formal development of concepts with philosophical reflections on topology, category theory, and sheaf theory, alongside a selection of advanced topics and examples that illustrate ideas like cellular sheaf cohomology, toposes, and geometric morphisms.
Sheaf Theory through Examples seeks to bridge the powerful results of sheaf theory as used by mathematicians and real-world applications, while also supplementing the technical matters with a unique philosophical perspective attuned to the broader development of ideas.
The open access edition of this book was made possible by generous funding from Arcadia – a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin.
Title: Sheaf Theory through Examples
Description:
An approachable introduction to elementary sheaf theory and its applications beyond pure math.
Sheaves are mathematical constructions concerned with passages from local properties to global ones.
They have played a fundamental role in the development of many areas of modern mathematics, yet the broad conceptual power of sheaf theory and its wide applicability to areas beyond pure math have only recently begun to be appreciated.
Taking an applied category theory perspective, Sheaf Theory through Examples provides an approachable introduction to elementary sheaf theory and examines applications including n-colorings of graphs, satellite data, chess problems, Bayesian networks, self-similar groups, musical performance, complexes, and much more.
With an emphasis on developing the theory via a wealth of well-motivated and vividly illustrated examples, Sheaf Theory through Examples supplements the formal development of concepts with philosophical reflections on topology, category theory, and sheaf theory, alongside a selection of advanced topics and examples that illustrate ideas like cellular sheaf cohomology, toposes, and geometric morphisms.
Sheaf Theory through Examples seeks to bridge the powerful results of sheaf theory as used by mathematicians and real-world applications, while also supplementing the technical matters with a unique philosophical perspective attuned to the broader development of ideas.
The open access edition of this book was made possible by generous funding from Arcadia – a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin.
Related Results
Sheaf Theory
Sheaf Theory
Sheaf theory provides a means of discussing many different kinds of geometric objects in respect of the connection between their local and global properties. It finds its main appl...
Coarse Sheaf Cohomology
Coarse Sheaf Cohomology
A certain Grothendieck topology assigned to a metric space gives rise to a sheaf cohomology theory which sees the coarse structure of the space. Already constant coefficients produ...
Grounded Theory
Grounded Theory
Widely used in social work, grounded theory is one of the oldest and best-known qualitative research methods. Even so, it is often misunderstood. Created at a time when positivism ...
Game Theory in Business Ethics: Bad Ideology or Bad Press?
Game Theory in Business Ethics: Bad Ideology or Bad Press?
Solomon’s article and Binmore’s response exemplify a standard exchange between the game theorist and those critical of applying game theory to ethics. The critic of game theory lis...
Dimensional reduction in cohomological Donaldson–Thomas theory
Dimensional reduction in cohomological Donaldson–Thomas theory
For oriented $-1$-shifted symplectic derived Artin stacks, Ben-Bassat, Brav, Bussi and Joyce introduced certain perverse sheaves on them which can be regarded as sheaf-theoretic ca...
On the group sheaf of $$\mathcal{A}$$-symplectomorphisms
On the group sheaf of $$\mathcal{A}$$-symplectomorphisms
Abstract
This is a part of a further undertaking to affirm that most of classical module theory may be retrieved in the framework of Abstract Differential Geometry (...
Against the Compulsive Urge to Interpret By Dorian Vale
Against the Compulsive Urge to Interpret By Dorian Vale
Against the Compulsive Urge to Interpret
By Dorian Vale
In this incisive essay, Dorian Vale issues a direct challenge to the modern compulsion to interpret everything—especially ...
The Custodian of Consequence: Reframing the Role of the Critic By Dorian Vale
The Custodian of Consequence: Reframing the Role of the Critic By Dorian Vale
The Custodian of Consequence: Reframing the Role of the Critic
By Dorian Vale
In this philosophical essay, Dorian Vale redefines the role of the critic—not as interpreter, judge,...

