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There are two ways to define smooth mapping spaces and I want to know how they compare.

Let's take the concrete special case of free loops spaces. I think this is the most studied example so will probably have the best chance of an answer. Roughly the free loop space is a space which is supposed to be the space of maps from the circle to a given space X. It is usually denoted LX. This is all fine and good for topological spaces. You get a nice mapping space LX by equipping the set of maps with the compactly generated compact open topology. It even satisfies the adjunction:

$ Map(Y, LX) = Map( Y \times S^1, X)$

However things get complicated when we want to work with manifolds. The first thing is that we want something that represents smooth maps from the circle into the manifold X.

There are basically two approaches to making such an object precise, and I want to know how they compare.

The first approach actually tries to construct an actual space of smooth maps. Here you start with the set of smooth maps LX, and with analytical muscle you give it the structure of an infinite dimensional Fréchet manifold. When X = G is a Lie group, this is an inifinite dimensional Lie group and is the thing whose (projective) representations make an appearence in conformal field theory.

The second approach is to study the loop space as a generalized smooth space. What is a generalized smooth space, you ask? Well there was a lot of discussion about it at the N-category Cafe, here and here. Roughly LX is thought of as a kind of sheaf via the formula:

$LX(Y) = Maps(Y, LX) = Maps(Y \times S^1, X)$

In some models it must be a concrete sheaf (i.e. it has a underlying set of points and every map from it to anything else which is concrete is a particular set map. The technical details appear in the Baez-Hoffnung paper in the second link). Clearly this model has its own desirable properties.

How does the manifold version of loop space compare to the sheaf theoretic version?

Presumably the Fréchet manifold model gives a sheaf (since we can just map into it). Does this agree with the sheaf defined by the adjunction formula? If they are not the same sheaf, they do seem to have the same points, right? And I think there is a comparison map from the manifold LX to the sheaf LX, which should be helpful. Can anyone explain their relationship? How similar/different are they?

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    $\begingroup$ Yay! I think this rates as my favourite question so far on MO! All my favourite tags (ignoring "sheaf theory", and for the full set you ought to put "functional analysis"). Thanks for asking it! $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2010 at 19:55
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    $\begingroup$ Oh, and you should link to the nLab page on generalised smooth spaces as well as the nCafe posts: ncatlab.org/nlab/show/generalized+smooth+space especially since there are a variety of ways of thinking of these things (all agree for loop spaces, though). $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2010 at 20:03
  • $\begingroup$ I did have the functional analysis tag originally, but MO wouldn't let me post. 5 tag limit! $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2010 at 20:23
  • $\begingroup$ In that case, I forgive you. $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2010 at 21:15
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    $\begingroup$ Urs Schreiber's just told me another way of defining loop spaces. He's put the details at the nLab page: ncatlab.org/nlab/show/smooth+loop+space I don't understand it all yet but looks interesting! $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2010 at 21:28

2 Answers 2

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They are the same.

If you want the full gory details, read "A Convenient Setting of Global Analysis" by Kriegl and Michor (available as a free PDF via the AMS bookstore). For a gentler approach, read my online seminar notes "The Differential Topology of Loop Spaces". Michor has also written a fair bit on manifolds of mappings, and I've written the odd article on them as well.

But basically, the manifold structure on $LM$ is the "right" structure so that the exponential law:

$$ C^\infty(N \times S^1,M) \cong C^\infty(N, LM) $$

holds.

I just (today, but before you posted this) started smooth loop space with the intention of copying over some of my seminar notes and other oddments into the nLab. If there's anything you are particularly interested in, let me know and that'll give me some incentives to get on with the project!

PS I notice you picked loops as an example. For the more general case of the exponential law, you should read the Kriegl and Michor book. Basically, it works fine where the object being exponentiated is a compact manifold. For non-compact manifolds you need to use a different structure which is a little weirder.

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  • $\begingroup$ So this means that they have the same smooth functions right? (Where smooth functions are the usual sort for the manifold model, and natural transformations of sheaves LX --> R for the sheaf version). $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2010 at 20:46
  • $\begingroup$ I'm pretty sure that's right. I think that this is easiest to see in the Frolicher model where the smooth functions are explicitly built in to the set-up (though that's not a sheaf model, you can then get from the Frolicher to one of the sheaf set-ups via an obvious functor and loop spaces are preserved under it). The key (I think) is that the smooth functions off LX are characterised by the fact that they compose nicely with smooth functions R -> LX, and those correspond to smooth maps S^1xR -> X via the exponential law. $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2010 at 21:14
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Andrew is right! Let me amend my personal point of view, where generalized smooth manifolds are diffeological spaces.

The Fréchet manifold structure of LX agrees with the diffeology on LX in the following sense.

There is a functor $$F: Frech \to Diff$$ from Fréchet manifolds to diffeological spaces defined in the same way as the well-known functor $M: Man \to Diff$ from smooth manifolds to diffeological spaces: a plot is precisely a smooth map $c: U \to LX$, where $U$ is an object in the domain category, e.g. an open subset of some $\mathbb{R}^n$.

(By the way: a theorem of M. Losik says that the functor $F$ is full and faithful, just like the functor $M$!)

Now there are two diffeologies on LX: the first is the one described in Chris' question. A map $c:U \to LX$ is a plot if and only if the associated map $U \times S^1 \to X$ is smooth. The second diffeology is the one obtained from the functor $F$.

These two diffeologies coincide in the sense that every plot of one is a plot of the other. In particular, they have the same sets of smooth functions.

If you want to see a pedestrian's proof I advertise Lemma A.1.7 in my paper "Transgression to Loop Spaces and its Inverse I".

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    $\begingroup$ Now if only you'd said "Frolicher" instead of "diffeological" I could have voted for your answer .... (just in case it's not clear to anyone else, I did vote for this answer) $\endgroup$ Jan 25, 2010 at 9:27
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    $\begingroup$ I would like to ask this: Let now X a compact manifold and $p:X^{S^1}-->X$ a fibration that admits sections. Set $Sect(p)$ the non empty set of that sections, topologized with the open compact topology. My question is: $Sect(p)$ inherits also a structure of manifold ? $\endgroup$
    – MyIsmail
    May 16, 2015 at 15:09
  • $\begingroup$ @MyIsmail, if you would like to ask that, then why not do so as a new question? $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Nov 1, 2019 at 15:56

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