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23:00
So basically: for any adjunction we get a monad for free
I see
and when we have a monad on a category, then we can look at the category of algebras over that monad (I think defining morphisms of algebras over a monad is not necessary at this point)
but in our example something remarkable happened: the category of algebras over the monad was just the other category from the adjunction
but all these parts that define a monad live just in the category where the monad lives
so in this case $\mathbf{Set}$
As it turns out, this is not always the case
for an adjunction with a left adjoint $F:C \to D$, $D$ might be a different category than the category of algebras over the monad induced by the adjunction
you can check that this stuff works if we replace free monoids with free groups, free modules, etc. but not with topological spaces
So this is a special situation
we call this a "monadic adjunction"
But when we have a monadic adjunction, then this is tells us quite a lot
@B.Mehta @Daminark did you figure out the thing about $L^1$ and $L^\infty$
so when the left adjoint is $F:C \to D$ and this is part of a monadic adjunction, then we can completely describe the category $D$ as objects in $C$ together with some additional structure (given by the algebra structure over the monad from the adjunction)
And I think this is also a bit like your result looks like
and faithfully flat descent is also a special case of this
in what sense?
23:08
I think it's probably a monadic adjunction + some other duality
the dual of a torus is a finitely generated free abelian group, right?
dual?
character group
the character of a torus is a f.g.f.a.g
right
of a split torus
okay so in faithfully flat descent you basically prove that if $f: R \to S$ is a faithfully flat ring homomorphism, then restriction of scalars along that functor (for algebras, modules, schemes over Spec(R), module-sheaves etc.) part of a monadic adjunction
you always have the restriction of scalars and extension of scalars adjunction of course
but when you have a faithfully flat ring homomophism, it's actually a monadic adjunction
so algebraic geometers call the algebra structure associated to the algebra for that monad "descent datum"
but for Galois descent, i.e. $f: K \to L$ is a Galois extension, then this descent datum/ this algebra structure over the monad from the adjunction is just an action from the Galois group
could you state the theorem?
23:14
yeah that's the problem I don't know the exact statements of the concrete results
I see
thanks
But I thought this might still help you get what Galois descent is about
dankschee
How does one prove that $\Bbb{R}$ are $\Bbb{R}^n$ are isomorphic as $\Bbb{Q}$-vector spaces if it has NOT yet been proven that two vector spaces are isomorphic if they have the same dimension?
23:16
may Galois ascend to heaven
@user193319 it starts with "choose a basis..."
what you said is very easy to prove
@user193319 I don't think that you can prove that without basically writing down the proof for that statement
you literally build an isomorphism based on the fact that they have the same dimension
you take a bijection between bases and extend linearly
@LeakyNun that video basically describes what the algebra structure over the monad for the adjunction is
thanks
23:20
(I should note that geometers who are less fond of category probably have another PoV on this stuff)
they don't exist
ok i'm joking their PoV might be useful
So the irrationals form a linearly independent set in $\Bbb{R}$, right?
you won't be able to write down a basis explicitly
@MatheinBoulomenos is the analogy in the beginning basically talking about sheaves?
23:22
@LeakyNun you mean with covering spaces?
I'd say no
I'm not trying to write down a basis; I'm just trying to show that $\Bbb{R}$ is infinite dimensional.
that isn't enough
you need to argue on cardinality
ok that's enough because (infinite cardinal)^n = (same infinite cardinal)
An infinite linearly independent set isn't enough to show infinite dimensionality?
but that isn't trivial
23:23
@LeakyNun Basically taking a pullback along a covering is like extending scalars along your field extension
that's the analogy
you need to show that the cardinality is equal @user193319
ok he's now invoking the Galois correspondence of covering spaces
@MatheinBoulomenos oh right it's fibre product in the category of schemes
Why do I need to show equality between cardinalities? I thought that sameness of dimension was what I needed to show they are isomorphic.
"sameness" = "equality"
23:27
dimension = cardinality of basis
But that's an extra thing to argue; I don't have that theorem yet.
@MatheinBoulomenos $E/F$ field extension with Galois group $\Gamma$, $A$ is $F$-algebra, why $(A \otimes_F E)^\Gamma \cong A$?
(fixed points)
hmm, covering space analogy is extensively used in the video
@LeakyNun not sure
interesting
the theorem is very easy to state
and for me it is too good (to be true)
@MatheinBoulomenos so this is just a problem in Galois theory now
It would be enough to prove this for vector spaces actually
23:35
Does this work: $(A \otimes_F E)^\Gamma \cong A \otimes_F E^\Gamma \cong A \otimes_F F \cong A$
or is it bollocks?
the first equality is kind of mysterious
you have finite sums of elementary tensors
the Galois group is $\Gamma = \operatorname{Gal}(E/F)$
the action is just changing the $E$ part
finite sums?
hmm I think my argument works
Do I need AoC to arbitarily choose a countably infinite subset of an uncountable set?
@GFauxPas define uncountable
no injection into the naturals
countable: yes injection into the naturals
23:39
so we just want to construct an injection $\Bbb N \to S$ right
given that no injection $S \to \Bbb N$ exists
I think you can use the UMP of $\Bbb N$ to construct such a map
@LeakyNun I guess it works, but I'd argue with choosing a basis for $A$ as $k$-vector space to be safe
dont know what that is
(i.e. induction / recursion)
23:40
ump?
that's category-theoretic language :P
universal mapping property
a function $\Bbb N \to S$ is the same as the following data
1. a point in $S$
2. a successor function $S \to S$
eh... I may have stated the theorem wrongly
@MatheinBoulomenos can correct me
@MatheinBoulomenos and then it works, and we can throw away the basis
okay proofwiki says you need at least the axiom of dependent choice
I see
23:41
or axiom of countable choice
I suppose you need that
I can prove that there is injection $n \to S$ for each $n \in \Bbb N$ that satisfies the obvious diagrams
then I suppose I need countable choice to glue them together to get a global function $\Bbb N \to S$
category theory has polluted my mind. it's too late now.
@LeakyNun yes
@LeakyNun I'm not sure whether you need countable choice or dependent choice, tbh
"The Axiom of Choice is obviously true; the Well Ordering Principle is obviously false; and who can tell about Zorn's Lemma?" - Jerry Bona
23:43
I'd say dependent choice
I'm lost beyond that point
@MatheinBoulomenos let's play the noetherian ring game
No it works with countable choice
The axiom of countable choice or axiom of denumerable choice, denoted ACω, is an axiom of set theory that states that every countable collection of non-empty sets must have a choice function. I.e., given a function A with domain N (where N denotes the set of natural numbers) such that A(n) is a non-empty set for every n ∈ N, then there exists a function f with domain N such that f(n) ∈ A(n) for every n ∈ N. == Overview == The axiom of countable choice (ACω) is strictly weaker than the axiom of dependent choice (DC), (Jech 1973) which in turn is weaker than the axiom of choice (AC). Paul C...
@LeakyNun I want to know how IGN would rate the Noetherian ring game
@LeakyNun I should sleep now
gute nacht
bona nox
23:49
gute Nacht und viel Erfolg mit dem Projekt
dank'schee
[Galois Descent (for Algebras)] [only statement]
Let $F/E$ be a Galois extension with Galois group $\Gamma := \operatorname{Gal}(F/E)$.

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