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I'm trying to develop an intuition for Cech cohomology geometrically, but am currently failing. A lot of people seem to say that the groups $H^n$ measure obstructions to gluing local sections to get global ones. However I don't see how this works, and I think it's because I don't understand coboundaries.

I see that $H^0$ is the group of global sections. Moreover $B^1\setminus 0$ tells us all the 1-cochains arising from the failure of 0-cochains to glue to give global sections. This suggests to me that we might want to study $B^1$, but instead we quotient by it to get $H^1$. Why?

I know that $Z^1$ tells us all the 1-cochains that agree on overlaps, and obviously $B^1$ is a subset of $Z^1$. But I don't know what $Z^1$ modulo $B^1$ is meant to tell me. I especially don't see how it has anything to do with gluing things. As far as I can tell it just informs me about the consistent 1-cochains which don't have anything to do with the failure to glue 0-cochains together. What am I missing?

Edit: it has just occurred to me that maybe the thing I don't understand is the meaning of gluing here. If I have the wrong idea about that could somebody please explain what is meant by it? Many thanks!

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  • $\begingroup$ Why is this tagged mathematical physics? $\endgroup$ Mar 21, 2013 at 20:32
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    $\begingroup$ Because of its relevance to twistor theory - which motivated this question. I can remove it if you like! $\endgroup$ Mar 21, 2013 at 20:38
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    $\begingroup$ Think of it this way: Given an exact sequence $0\to A\to B\to C\to 0$ of sheaves, you may want to a lift a global section $c$ from $C$ to $B$ (for many natural reasons). Lift locally to get $b_i\in B(U_i)$. So $b_i-b_j\in A(U_{ij})$ is the obstruction to patching these. But keep in mind that you might have a made a bad initial choice, whereas $b_i'=b_i+a_i$ might have patched. So that's why you should allow yourself the option of modifying by a coboundary.... $\endgroup$ Mar 21, 2013 at 20:56
  • $\begingroup$ @Donu Arapura - I don't understand why $b_i - b_j$ is in $A(U_{ij})$, nor how you can add elements of $A$ to those of $B$. Could you possibly clarify (or expand your explanation) in an answer? Also what is wrong with my reasoning about why we should look at $B^1$ not $Z^1$? Very many thanks in advance for your help! $\endgroup$ Mar 21, 2013 at 21:38
  • $\begingroup$ Edward, by the ses Donu included, A⊆B, so every element of A may be considered an element of B. For the difference the absolute precise thing to write would be $(b_i)|_{U_{ij}}-(b_j)|_{U_{ij}}$ $\endgroup$ Mar 21, 2013 at 22:42

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Let $U$ denote the space we're working on and $\{U_i\}$ an open cover of $U$ (obviously $U$ may be an open set of an ambient space, but that plays no importance here). Let's assume that there is a sheaf $\mathscr F$ on $U$ and for each $i$ a section $s_i\in\mathscr F(U_i)$.

Gluing the $s_i$ means to find a section $s\in \mathscr F(U)$ such that for each $i$ $$ s|_{U_i}=s_i. $$

The obvious obstruction to this is that the $s_i$ and $s_j$ has to agree on the overlap. So, in order for such an $s$ to exist, we must have that $$ (s_i)|_{U_{ij}}=(s_j)|_{U_{ij}}. \tag{$\star$}$$ In other words such that the $0$-cochain $\{(U_i,s_i)\}$ is in $Z^0=H^0$ and this is clearly enough. One could argue, which might be your motivation, that this doesn't measure failure, but indeed it measures the success of gluing. I agree.


For $H^1$ I think it is still better to think of it as the measure of failure of lifting, but because we're talking about sheaves this means gluing in practice. In other words, consider a surjective morphism of sheaves, $$ \mathscr F \twoheadrightarrow \mathscr F'', $$ and imagine wanting to lift sections of $\mathscr F''$ to $\mathscr F$. So, you start with a $t\in \mathscr F''(U)$ and from the sheaf properties you know that there exists $\mathfrak U=\{U_i\}$, an open cover of $U$, and for each $i$ a section $t_i\in\mathscr F(U_i)$ such that $ t|_{U_i}$ is the image of $t_i$ via the map $\mathscr F\to\mathscr F''$.

In order to lift $t$ to $\mathscr F(U)$ you need to glue the $t_i$. For that you consider the the $1$-cochain $\sigma= \{(U_{ij},(t_i)|_{U_{ij}}-(t_j)|_{U_{ij}})\}$. Clearly $(t_i)|_{U_{ij}}-(t_j)|_{U_{ij}}$ maps to $0$ in $\mathscr F''$, so it is naturally a $1$-cochain of sections of $\mathscr F'=\ker \big[\mathscr F\to\mathscr F''\big]$. An obvious computation shows that it is in $Z^1(\mathfrak U,\mathscr F')$.

Now observe that $\sigma\in B^1(\mathfrak U,\mathscr F')$ if and only if there exists a $0$-cochain $\{(U_i,t_i')\}$ of $\mathscr F'$ such that $$ (t_i)|_{U_{ij}}-(t_j)|_{U_{ij}} = (t_i')|_{U_{ij}}-(t_j')|_{U_{ij}} $$ which is the same as to say that the sections $$ t_i-t_i'\in \mathscr F(U_i) $$ satisfy $(\star)$ and hence they glue together to a section $t'\in\mathscr F(U)$. Notice, that since $t_i'\in\mathscr F'(U_i)$, the image of $t_i-t_i'$ in $\mathscr F''(U_i)$ is the same as the image of $t_i$, that is, $t|_{U_i}$.

In other words, the original $t\in \mathscr F''(U)$ can be lifted, or equivalently, the sections $t_i-t_i'\in\mathscr F(U_i)$ can be glued if and only if the above associated $1$-cocycle in $$ H^1(\mathfrak U, \mathscr F')=Z^1(\mathfrak U, \mathscr F')/B^1(\mathfrak U, \mathscr F') $$ is $0$.


OK, so let's see about $H^2$. If you accept that $H^1$ is the obstruction to lifting sections, that is, lifting elements of $H^0$, then the same argument shows that $H^2$ measures the failure of lifting these obstructions.

Suppose you have a surjective map between two short exact sequences: $$ \begin{matrix} 0 & & 0 \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow \\ \mathscr F' & \twoheadrightarrow & \mathscr G' \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow \\ \mathscr F & \twoheadrightarrow & \mathscr G \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow \\ \mathscr F'' & \twoheadrightarrow & \mathscr G'' \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow \\ 0 & & 0 \\ \end{matrix} $$ and let $\mathscr K'=\ker\big[ \mathscr F'\to \mathscr G'\big]$, $\mathscr K=\ker\big[ \mathscr F\to \mathscr G\big]$, and $\mathscr K''=\ker\big[ \mathscr F''\to \mathscr G''\big]$, so by the $9$ lemma there is a short exact sequence $$ 0 \to \mathscr K' \to \mathscr K\to \mathscr K'' \to 0 $$

Then as we found above, $H^1(\mathscr K'')$ measures the failure of lifting sections from $\mathscr G''$ (or equivalently gluing the local liftings) and $H^1(\mathscr K)$ measures the failure of lifting sections from $\mathscr G$ (or equivalently gluing the local liftings). The morphism induces a natural map $$ H^1(\mathscr K)\to H^1(\mathscr K'') $$ which is compatible with the above diagram in the sense that if $t\in \mathscr G(U)$ is a section, then the obstruction of lifting this to $\mathscr F(U)$ in $H^1(\mathscr K)$ maps to the obstruction (in $H^1(\mathscr K'')$) of lifting the image of $t$ in $\mathscr G''$ to $\mathscr F''$.

Now if you start with an element of $H^1(\mathscr K'')$, which could be an obstruction to lifting some section of $\mathscr G''$ to $\mathscr F''$, then the obstruction to lifting this to an element of $H^1(\mathscr K)$ lies in $H^2(\mathscr K')$. Of course, this is nothing else but saying in words what the long exact cohomology sequence means, but if you write down how these cohomology elements can be represented by a Cech cocycle and try to lift them by lifting locally and then gluing following the exact same steps as above, then you will get exactly this.


To get higher cohomology groups, you may iterate this process. Of course, it gets pretty hairy very soon.

Let me add that in my opinion the best way to understand higher cohomology is that it is the lower cohomology of syzygies. In other words, consider a sheaf $\mathscr F$ and embed it into an acyclic (e.g., flasque or injective or flabby or soft) sheaf. So you get a short exact sequence: $$ 0\to \mathscr F\to \mathscr A\to \mathscr G \to 0 $$ Since $\mathscr A$ is acyclic, we have that for $i>0$ $$ H^{i+1}(\mathscr F)\simeq H^i(\mathscr G), $$ so if you understand what $H^1$ means, then $H^2$ of $\mathscr F$ is just $H^1$ of $\mathscr G$, $H^3$ of $\mathscr F$ is just $H^2$ of $\mathscr G$ and so on.

This, of course, is not special to Cech cohomology, but you can use Cech cohomology to get a feeling for $H^1$ and then use this to get a feeling for $H^{>1}$.

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  • $\begingroup$ @Sandor - thanks very much for your answer. There are some things I don't understand though. Firstly $\{(U_i,s_i)\}$ is a $0$-cochain not a $1$-cochain, so what do you mean there? Moreover the condition $\star$ holding will guarantee that $\delta{\{s_i\}} = 0$ and won't give the whole of $B_1$, since by definition $B_1$ includes all those $1$-cochains that come from the failure of $0$-cochains to patch together. So I don't see how your final paragraph is true. Have I missed something? $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 10:59
  • $\begingroup$ Also why don't we study $B^1$ when it seems like it's a much simpler object to be interested in? Many thanks again! $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 14:58
  • $\begingroup$ Edward: The cochains in $B^1$ are the ones that can be patched together. We're interested in understanding the cochains that can't be patched together. $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 16:05
  • $\begingroup$ Edward: I tried to simplify things which resulted in mixing up a few things. Sorry about that. I think this is OK now. $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 16:43
  • $\begingroup$ @Steven - I don't understand what you are saying. The 1-cochains in $B^1\setminus 0$ precisely arise from those 0-cochains which don't patch together. Could you possibly explain what you mean? $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 17:14
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Regarding higher cohomology, I was about to write another comment, but the comments are getting a bit long, so let say a few words here. Cech theory is really a generalization of simplicial cohomology, as Liviu explained, and this is really the best way to understand where the formulas come from. But if you find that unhelpful, let me work out a basic example. Suppose $X$ is a $C^\infty$ or complex manifold, and let $\mathcal{O}_X$ denote either the sheaf of complex valued $C^\infty$ functions or holomorphic functions. A complex line bundle is a manifold $L$ of the same type with a map $L\to X$ which makes it locally a product. In other words we have isomorphisms $\sigma_i:\mathbb{C}\times U_i\cong L|_{U_i}$. The first components of $\sigma_i^{-1}\sigma_j$ gives a Cech $1$-cocycle of $g_{ij}\in \mathcal{O}^*(U_{ij})$. If you wish to eliminate the choice of trivialization ($\sigma_i$), you need to work with cohomology class.

The basic topological invariant of $L$ is its first Chern class $c_1(L)\in H^2(X,\mathbb{Z})$ which measure the failure of $L$ to be (topologically) a product. The first question is what does $H^2$ mean? The second is what is $c_1$? For 1, you can triangulate $X$, and use simplicial cohomology, or you can use Cech cohomology. The fact that the formulas are similar, means that the group may be similar. In fact, they are the same. For 2, we note that in the $C^\infty$ case, $H^1(X,\mathcal{O}_X)=0$. We can attempt lift back to this trivial group by taking the normalized logarithm $\frac{1}{2\pi \sqrt{-1}}\log g_{ij}$. However, because the logarithm is "multvalued", there is no guarantee that this is a cocycle. So take the Cech boundary to get $$c_1(L) = \frac{1}{2\pi \sqrt{-1}}(\log g_{ij}+\log g_{jk}+\log g_{ki})$$ When the cohomology class defined by this vanishes, then $L$ is topologically trivial.

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    $\begingroup$ @Donu - thanks for the nice example. So I should just think of higher cohomology as useful tools for computing invariants, rather than as "obstructions to gluing" then? $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 19:24
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    $\begingroup$ The first Chern class $c_1(L)$ is the obstruction to having a nowhere vanishing smooth section of $L$. The obstruction intuition is good, up to a point. $\endgroup$ Mar 23, 2013 at 10:32
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    $\begingroup$ Edward, there is no single answer to how to think about higher cohomology. Much of the power of sheaf cohomology stems from the fact that it can be understood in several ways. $\endgroup$ Mar 23, 2013 at 12:50
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For me the easiest way to get some intutition is to look at the specific example of the sheaf $\mathcal{O}$ of holomorphic functions on $\mathbb{C}$:

Let $U$ and $V$ be open domains in $\mathbb{C}$ with non-empty intersection, and choose a $1$-cochain $f$ for $W=U \cup V$, that is, an element of $\mathcal{O}(U \cap V)$. (We'll all the time work with respect to the cover given by $U,V$). We are wondering when we can find a $g_1 \in \mathcal{O}(U), g_2 \in \mathcal{O}(V)$ such that $$ f=g_1 - g_2, \text{ on } U \cap V.$$ In other word, we are wondering when we can find a 0-cochain $g$ such that $$f=\delta g .$$ A necessary condition for this is that $f$ is a cocyle, i.e. $\delta f=0$. This means that for a cocyle $f$ we can solve the above problem precisely when $[f]=[0]$ as an element of $H^1(W,\mathcal{O})$. In particular, if $H^1(W,\mathcal{O})=0$ we can always solve it.

The "gluing" in this case comes from the Mittag-Leffler problem. A simple form of this problem is the following: Let $s_1$ be a meromorphic function on $U$ with a single pole at point $x_1 \in U \setminus V$, and similarly, let $s_2$ be a meromorphic function on $V$ with a single pole at $x_2 \in V \setminus U$. We now ask ourselves: can we find a meromorphic function $t$ on $W$ such that $t$ is holomorphich outside of $x_1,x_2$ and such that $t$ has the "same pole" as $s_1$ at $x_1$ and the "same pole" as $s_2$ at $x_2$. Here, by "same pole" I mean that if we locally write $s_1$ and $t$ using a Laurent-expansion around the point $x_1$, the Laurent-tails should be the same. So where does $H^1(W,\mathcal{O})$ enter the picture? Well, on $U \cap V$ the function $s_1 - s_2$ is holomorphic, i.e. $$s_1 - s_2 \in \mathcal{O}(U \cap V),$$ i.e. $s_1 - s_2$ is a 1-cochain. Now, assume that we can find a 0-cochain $g$ with $$ \delta g = s_1 - s_2,$$ i.e. functions $g_1 \in \mathcal{O}(U), g_2 \in \mathcal{O}(V)$ with $$ g_1 - g_2 = s_1 - s_2 \Leftrightarrow s_1 - g_1 = s_2 - g_2 \text{ on } U \cap V.$$ Then $s_1 - g_1$ and $s_2 - g_2$ glue together to give you a meromorphic function on $W$ which has the same poles as $t_1$ and $t_2$ at the point $x_1$ and $x_2$ respectively. (This is of course so since $g_1$ and $g_2$ are holomorphic and thus contain no poles.) Thus we see that the obstruction to solving the Mittag-Leffler problem is $H^1(W,\mathcal{O})$, i.e., if $H^1(W,\mathcal{O})=0$ we always have a solution to the problem.

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If you accept that the boundary operator of a simiplicial complex has an intuitive explanation, then the Cech coboundary operator should be intuitive as well. Let me elaborate.

Suppose we are given an open cover $\newcommand{\eU}{\mathscr{U}}$ $\eU=(U_\alpha)_{\alpha\in A}$. To this cover we associate a simplicial complex, the nerve of the cover, denoted by $N(\eU)$ and defined as follows.

The set of vertices is $A$. Two vertices $\alpha,\beta$ are connected by an edge if $U_\alpha\cap U_\beta\neq \emptyset$. $\newcommand{\si}{\sigma}$ A finite set

$$ \si=\lbrace\si_0,\dotsc,\si_k\rbrace\subset A $$

spans a $k$-face if the overlap

$$ U_\si:= U_{\si_0}\cap\cdots \cap U_{\si_k} $$

is nontrivial. We denote by $N_k(\eU)$ the set of $k$-faces of $\eU$. Assume for simplicity that $A$ is linearly ordered.

If $\newcommand{\eS}{\mathscr{S}}$ $\eS$ is the sheaf whose cohomology you are investigatining, we set $\eS_\si:= \Gamma(U_\si, \eS)$.

A Cech $k$-cochain $f$ is a correspondence that associates to each $k$-face $\si$ an element $\langle f, \si\rangle\in\eS_\si$.

It coboundary $\delta f$ is defined to be the dual of the boundary operator of the simplicial complex $N(\eU)$. In other words, it is determined by the equality

$$ \langle \delta f,\tau\rangle =\langle f,\partial \tau\rangle, $$

for any $(k+1)$-face $\tau =\lbrace\tau_0,\dotsc,\tau_{k+1}\rbrace$ of the nerve. Let me clarify this statement.

We have $\newcommand{\pa}{\partial}$

$$\partial \tau =\sum_{i=0}^{k+1}(-1)^i\pa_i\tau,\;\;\pa_i\tau:=\tau\setminus \lbrace i\rbrace, $$

Note that $U_{\pa_i\tau}\supset U_\tau$ for any $i\in\tau$, and we define

$$ \langle f ,\tau \rangle =\sum_{i=0}^{k+1} (-1)^i \langle f,\pa_i\tau\rangle\vert_{U_\tau}. $$

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    $\begingroup$ @Liviu - Thanks for your answer. Unfortunately I don't see that this makes it seem more intuitive, since associating a nerve to the cover seems unintuitive to me! I guess I was looking for a more analytic and geometric thought process, rather than an algebraic one. $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 17:11
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    $\begingroup$ Associating a nerve to a cover is actually a very natural thing to do! The geometric realization of the nerve is an approximation of the original space, as seen by the cover. $\endgroup$ Mar 22, 2013 at 19:05
  • $\begingroup$ @Mariano: I think that there are many constructions that are natural yet not too intuitive, at least for the first time. Just as a random example, the derived category is a (very) natural way to understand cohomology, I would even say it is a better way, but you need to sharpen your teeth on some other, more naive constructions before you can appreciate that. My feeling is that Edward is looking for a more naive approach. He never said this was not natural, just that it wasn't intuitive (to him if you will) either. $\endgroup$ Mar 23, 2013 at 17:28

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