16
$\begingroup$

Let $M$ be a differential manifold and $\mathcal H^k$ the presheaf of real vector spaces associating to the open subset $U\subset M$ the $k$-th de Rham cohomology vector space: $\mathcal H^k(U)=H^k_{DR}(U)$. Is this presheaf a sheaf?
Of course not! Indeed, given any non-zero cohomology class $0\neq[\omega]\in \mathcal H^k(U)$ represented by the closed $k$-form $\omega\in \Omega^k_M(U)$ there exists (by Poincaré's Lemma) a covering $(U_i)_{i\in I}$ of $U$ by open subsets $U_i\subset U$ such that $[\omega]\vert U_i=[\omega\vert U_i]=0\in \mathcal H^k(U_i)$, and thus the first axiom for a presheaf to be a sheaf is violated.
But what about the second axiom?
My question:
Suppose we are given a differential manifold M, a covering $(U_\lambda)_{\lambda \in \Lambda}$of $M$ by open subsets $U_\lambda \subset M$, closed differential $k-$forms $\omega_\lambda \in \Omega^k_M(U_\lambda)$ satisfying $[\omega_\lambda]\vert U_\lambda \cap U_\mu=[\omega_\mu]\vert U_\lambda \cap U_\mu\in \mathcal H^k(U_\lambda\cap U\mu)$ for all $\lambda,\mu \in \Lambda$.
Does there then exist a closed differential form $\omega\in \Omega^k(M)$ such that we have for the restrictions in cohomology: $[\omega]\vert U_\lambda=[\omega _\lambda]\in \mathcal H^k(U_\lambda)$ for all $\lambda\in \Lambda$ ?

Remarks

  1. This is an extremely naïve question which, to my embarrassment, I cannot solve.
    I have extensively browsed the literature and consulted some of my friends, all brilliant geometers (albeit not differential topologists), but they didn't know the answer offhand. For what it's worth, I would guess (but not conjecture!) that such glueing is impossible.
  2. If the covering of $X$ has only two opens then we can glue.
    This follows immediately from Mayer-Vietoris's long exact sequence $$\cdots \to \mathcal H^k(M) \to \mathcal H^k(U_1) \oplus \mathcal H^k(U_2) \to \mathcal H^k(U_1\cap U_2)\to \cdots$$

Update
My brilliant friends didn't answer offhand but a few hours later, unsurprisingly, they came back to me with splendid counterexamples! See below.

$\endgroup$
4
  • $\begingroup$ Just a comment. Your first observation sounds like a good point to be included in introductions to derived categories. Incidentally, this also makes me wonder about a description/interpretation of the cohomology sheaves of the De Rham complex in the smooth category (i.e. the quotient sheaves of the respective kernel and image sheaves under $d$). I've actually never thought about it! $\endgroup$
    – M.G.
    May 12, 2022 at 12:08
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ @M.G. The Poincare lemma (ncatlab.org/nlab/show/Poincar%C3%A9+lemma) says that, on a smooth manifold, the de Rham complex of sheaves is exact, so the image sheaf of $d : \Omega^{q-1} \to \Omega^q$ is the same as the kernel of $d : \Omega^{q} \to \Omega^{q+1}$ and the cohomology sheaves are zero. Concretely, this image/kernel is the sheaf of closed $q$-forms: $Z^q(U)$ is the vector space of closed $q$-forms on $U$. It is easy to see this using the description as the kernel of $d : \Omega^{q} \to \Omega^{q+1}$, since kernel is the same for sheaves and presheaves. $\endgroup$ May 12, 2022 at 14:24
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ Dear @M.G., amusingly one of the brilliant geometers I allude to in my question made a very similar comment. Great minds think alike! Unfortunatately I had to tell him, as I am telling you, that I have only a very rudimentary knowledge of derived categories... $\endgroup$ May 12, 2022 at 14:24
  • $\begingroup$ Dear @DavidESpeyer, thanks for the very clear explanation! For whatever reasons I had never given much thought to the De Rham complex in terms of sheaves. I guess there is always a first! $\endgroup$
    – M.G.
    May 12, 2022 at 14:48

4 Answers 4

18
$\begingroup$

No.

Make $M$ by gluing three strips to two discs to form a thrice-punctured sphere. Take three open sets $U_\lambda$, each made by both discs and two of the strips. Then each $U_\lambda$ is homeomorphic to annulus and thus has $1$-dimensional $H^1$.

The pairwise intersections, made from one strip connecting two discs, are contractible and so their $H^1$ vanishes. Thus, for $k=1$, the agreement condition on the pairwise intersections is vacuous.

If your claim held, then we could choose a $1$-form on $M$ that restricts to an arbitrary cohomology class on each of the three $U_\lambda$, making the first de Rham cohomology of $M$ at least three-dimensional. But in fact it is only two-dimensional. Instead, there is a relation where the integrals around three clockwise loops around the three punctures sum to $0$, because these loops form the boundary of a particular subset of $M$.

It's true if the intersections $U_\lambda \cap U_\kappa \cap U_\mu$ are empty for all distinct $\lambda,\kappa,\mu$, by iteratively applying the Mayer-Vietoris sequence or applying a single exact sequence in sheaf cohomology.

$\endgroup$
4
  • 2
    $\begingroup$ I think it should also be true for good covers, by applying what Bott & Tu call the "Mayer-Vietoris principle" in Section 8 of their book Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology. $\endgroup$
    – Mark Grant
    May 12, 2022 at 14:58
  • 4
    $\begingroup$ @MarkGrant The statement is trivially true if all open sets are contractible, as then the cohomology groups vanish so any closed global differential form does the trick, which is a bit weaker than being a good cover. $\endgroup$
    – Will Sawin
    May 12, 2022 at 15:11
  • $\begingroup$ Thank you, dear Will: this is, as always with you, an excellent answer. $\endgroup$ May 13, 2022 at 16:51
  • 3
    $\begingroup$ @Mark Grant: Indeed the Mayer-Vietoris theorem says exactly that for a covering with two open pieces, glueing is always possible. So Will's nice counter-example is the most economical possible. $\endgroup$ May 13, 2022 at 16:55
11
$\begingroup$

This answer provides a positive answer to a refinement of the original question.

Recall that two closed differential $k$-forms $ω_0$, $ω_1$ on a smooth manifold $M$ have the same de Rham cohomology class if and only if they are concordant, i.e., there is a closed differential $k$-form $τ$ on $\def\R{{\bf R}} \R⨯M$ such that the pullbacks of $τ$ to $\{0\}⨯M$ and $\{1\}⨯M$ are equal to $ω_0$ and $ω_1$ respectively.

Thus, the given data can be reformulated as a collection of closed differential forms on $\{U_λ\}_{λ∈Λ}$ whose restrictions to pairwise intersections $U_λ∩U_μ$ are concordant.

In order to get a good descent-type statement, we make two modifications that are standard in sheaf theory:

  • We introduce the additional data of (a specific choice of) a concordance $ω_{λ,μ}$ between $ω_λ$ and $ω_μ$ on the open subset $U_λ∩U_μ$.

  • More generally, for every $(n+1)$-tuple $T$ of indices in $Λ$ we introduce an $n$-dimensional concordance, given by a closed differential $k$-form $ω_T$ on $Δ^n⨯(U_{T_0}∩⋯∩U_{T_n})$, which must be compatible with forms assigned to various faces of $T$.

It is this type of data that can be glued together. In fact, a much more general statement is true, where the sheaf of closed differential $k$-forms is replaced by any simplicial presheaf on the site of smooth manifolds:

Theorem (Theorem 1.1 in arXiv:1912.10544):

Suppose $F$ is a presheaf of simplicial sets on the site of smooth manifolds and smooth maps of manifolds, equipped with the usual Grothendieck topology of open covers. Define the simplicial presheaf $\def\B{{\rm B}} \B F$ via the formula $$\def\op{{\rm op}} \def\hocolim{\mathop{\rm hocolim}} \B F(M) = \hocolim_{n∈Δ^\op} F(Δ^n⨯M).$$ If $F$ is an ∞-sheaf (i.e., satisfies the homotopy descent condition), then so is $\B F$. Furthermore, $\B F$ is representable by the space $\B F(\R^0)$: the canonical map $$\def\R{{\bf R}} \def\Map{\mathop{\rm Map}} \B F(M)→\R\Map(M,\B F(\R^0))$$ is a weak equivalence.

This implies the desired statement: the data of forms on $U_λ$ together with concordances on $U_λ∩U_μ$ etc., defines a Čech descent data for the simplicial presheaf $\B F$, where $F$ is the sheaf of closed differential $n$-forms. According to the above theorem, this descent property of $\B F$ allows us to glue this data to a single section of $\B F$ (and therefore of $F$) over $M$, as desired.

Taking other simplicial presheaves $F$ produces similar gluing statements for other geometric objects, e.g., principal $G$-bundles with connection, bundles $d$-gerbes with connection, etc.

In particular, we see that the original statement is true if all triple intersections $U_λ∩U_μ∩U_ν$ are empty, since in this case there are no higher concordances to choose.

$\endgroup$
4
$\begingroup$

Here is the great answer given by another of my brilliant friends:
Let $X$ be $\mathbb C, U_0$ be the open complement in $X$ of the closed disk $\bar D=\{z\in \mathbb C\vert \vert z\vert \leq1 \}$ and add a few open discs $U_1,\cdots, U_n$ of radius $\lt 1$ covering $\bar D$ in order to obtain an open covering $U_0,U_1,\cdots U_n$ of $X$.
Now let $[0]\neq[\omega _0]\in \mathcal H^1(U_0)\cong \mathbb Z$ be a nonzero cohomology clas and define (no choice here!) $0=[\omega_i]\in \mathcal H^1(U_i)=0$.
The compatibility conditions are trivially satisfied since all intersections $U_i\cap U_j (i\neq j)$ are contractible, so that $\mathcal H^1(U_i\cap U_j )=0$.
Nevertheless we can't glue our cohomology classes $[\omega_i]$ to a global cohomology class $[\omega] \in \mathcal H^1(X)$ since the only global cohomology class on $X$ is $0\in \mathcal H^1(X)=0$, which does not restrict to $[\omega _0]\neq 0\in \mathcal H^1(U_0)$.
Remark
Here too the answer is entirely due to my geometer friend.

$\endgroup$
4
$\begingroup$

Here is the solution obtained by one of my brilliant geometer friends evoked in the question:
Take $X=S^2$, the unit $2$-sphere with equation $x_1^2+x_2 ^2+x_3^2=1$, and cover it by the three open strips $U_i=\{(x_1,x_2,x_3)\in S^2\vert \vert x_i \vert \leq \frac 35 \}$.

  1. The $U_i$'s do cover $S^2$: a point on the unit sphere can't have its three
    coordinates $\geq \frac 35$ .
  2. For all $i\neq j$ it we see, by projecting on the coordinate planes, that $U_i\cap U_j$ is the disjoint sum of two antipodal open spherical quadrilaterals homeomorphic to squares, so that $\mathcal H^1(U_i\cap U_j)=0$.
  3. Each $U_i$ deformation retracts to its central great circle, so that each $H_{DR}^1(U_i)=\mathbb Z$.

It is then clear that given arbitrary nonzero De Rham cohomology classes De Rham $0\neq [\omega_i]\in H_{DR}^1(U_i)$ the glueing condition is vacuously satisfied because of 1.
Nevertheless these cohomolgy classes can't be glued to a cohomology class in $S^2$ since $\mathcal H^1(S^2)=0$.
Important remark
My contribution to this answer is: zero, nada, zilch, que dalle...

$\endgroup$

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.