A universal characterization of noncommutative motives and secondary algebraic \(K\)-theory (Q6590095)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7899149
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | A universal characterization of noncommutative motives and secondary algebraic \(K\)-theory |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7899149 |
Statements
A universal characterization of noncommutative motives and secondary algebraic \(K\)-theory (English)
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21 August 2024
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The authors provide a universal characterization of the construction that maps a scheme \(X\) to its stable \(\infty\)-category \(\text{Mot}(X)\) of noncommutative motives. This construction is inspired by the universal characterization of algebraic K-theory developed by Blumberg, Gepner, and Tabuada. The paper's primary contribution is a corepresentability theorem for secondary K-theory, which the authors envision as a fundamental tool for constructing trace maps from secondary K-theory. To achieve this, they introduce a preliminary formalism of ``stable \((\infty, 2)\)-categories'', with notable examples including quasicoherent or constructible sheaves of stable \(\infty\)-categories. Additionally, Mazel-Gee and Stern develop the rudiments of a theory of presentable enriched \(\infty\)-categories, and more specifically, a theory of presentable \((\infty, n)\)-categories which may be of independent interest. The paper is structured as follows:\N\begin{itemize}\N\item[1.] \textit{Introduction}: Overview, background, motivation, main results, questions, and further directions.\N\item[2.] \textit{Stable \(2\)-categories and localization sequences}: Definitions and properties of stable \(2\)-categories, 1-localization sequences, and \(2\)-localization sequences.\N\item[3.] \textit{From motives to K-theory}: Discussion on motives, additive invariants, and the transition from motives to K-theory.\N\item[4.] \textit{From \(2\)-motives to secondary K-theory}: Exploration of \((2,1)\)-motives, \((2,1)\)-additive invariants, and the transition from \((2,1)\)-motives to \((2,1)\)-ary K-theory and secondary K-theory.\N\item[5.] Two appendices about enriched category theory and higher category theory.\N\end{itemize}
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\(K\)-theory
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secondary \(K\)-theory
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noncommutative motives
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universal characterization
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stable \((\infty,2)\)-categories
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