Let $X$ be a topological space and $\mathcal{F}$ be a sheaf of commutative topological groups on $X$. I am interested in the following question:
- Is there a natural way to introduce topology on $H^i(X, \mathcal{F})$?
My guess is that for each open covering $\mathcal{U}$ the space of Čech cochains $\check{C}(\mathcal{U}, \mathcal{F})$ can be endowed with the compact-open topology. This topology can be restricted to the space of closed cochains, descends to $H^i(\mathcal{U}, \mathcal{F})$ and induce direct limit topology on $H^i(X, \mathcal{F})$. But does this construction make sense? Say, is it functorial? Is it true that $H^i(X, \mathcal{F})$ are commutative topological groups (with respect to the natural group operation)? Are the other reasonable choices of topology on Čech complex? Can they lead to other topologies?
And what is the best reference on this topic?
I don't think that this is important, but in the situation I am interested in, the space $X$ is a (finite-dimensional) manifold and $\mathcal{F}$ is a sheaf of Lie groups.