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Let me recall the following definition. Let $F: C \to D$ be a functor between homotopical categories. Denote by $\gamma_C: C \to \mathrm{Ho} C$ the localization and similary for $D$. A total left derived functor $\mathbf{L}F: \mathrm{Ho}C \to \mathrm{Ho}D$ for $F$ is a right Kan extension of $\gamma_D \circ F$ along $\gamma_C$. This will be called an absolute derived functor if it is absolute as a Kan extension.

It is well-know that the following two properties of derived functors:

(a) if $F: C \to D$ and $F': D \to E$ are functors between homotopical categories that admit total left derived functors $\mathbf{L}F$ and $\mathbf{L}F'$, then $\mathbf{L}F' \circ \mathbf{L}F$ is a total left derived functor for $F' \circ F$.

(b) if $F : C \to D$ is left adjoint to $G: D \to C$ and $F$ and $G$ admit left and right total derived functors $\mathbf{L}F $ and $\mathbf{R}G$ respectively, then $\mathbf{L}F $ is left adjoint to $\mathbf{R} G$.

are in fact true if these functors are constructed via deformations (or, in particular, via (co)fibrant replacements in model categories), but are no more true in general, meaning, for derived functors that plainly satisfy the definition above.

Anyway, it is known, by a theorem of Maltsiniotis, that (b) holds true whenever the involved derived functors are not simply Kan extensions, but absolute ones.

I do not know if this is true also for (a), and I can not find any reference in the literature. For instance, Riehl in various places in her books or articles mentions the theorem by Maltsiniotis for adjunctions, but never says a word about composition of absolute derived functors. Cisinski in his book on Higher categories and homotopical algebra seems to suggest (Corollary 2.3.4 and Proposition 2.3.6) that (a) is in fact true for derived functors which are absolute Kan extensions, but does not give a proof.

So the question is: is property (a) true if $\mathbf{L}F $ and $\mathbf{L}F'$ are absolute Kan extensions?

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  • $\begingroup$ It is not true that composing absolute derived functors results in an absolute derived functor, not even if you construct them using deformations. There is a compatibility condition that is automatically satisfied when you have Quillen functors and use (co)fibrant replacements, though. $\endgroup$
    – Zhen Lin
    Jul 16, 2022 at 10:31
  • $\begingroup$ @ZhenLin is that beacuse such a composite is not an absolute derived functor or does it fail to be also a plain one? I thought this was true for derived functors built with deformations, though. $\endgroup$
    – carciofo21
    Jul 16, 2022 at 11:27
  • $\begingroup$ See, for instance, Thm 2.2.9 in Categorical homotopy theory by Riehl $\endgroup$
    – carciofo21
    Jul 16, 2022 at 11:32
  • $\begingroup$ That's a different definition of deformable functor. The original DHKS definition does not require that the image of an object in the "deformation retract" of the domain category to be an object in the "deformation retract" of the codomain category. (This is the compatibility condition I was alluding to.) $\endgroup$
    – Zhen Lin
    Jul 16, 2022 at 12:09
  • $\begingroup$ @ZhenLin I see. Are the counterexamples supposed to be obvious? $\endgroup$
    – carciofo21
    Jul 16, 2022 at 18:26

1 Answer 1

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Here is a somewhat degenerate example that illustrates what can go wrong.

Let $\textbf{Ab}$ be the category of abelian groups, considered as a homotopical category where the weak equivalences are the isomorphisms, and let $\textbf{Ch}$ be the category of chain complexes of abelian groups, considered as a homotopical category where the weak equivalences are the quasi-isomorphisms. The obvious functor $\textbf{Ab} \to \textbf{Ch}$ sending each abelian group to the corresponding chain complex concentrated in degree 0 is homotopical. On the other hand, if $M$ is not a flat abelian group, then $M \otimes_\mathbb{Z} {-}$ is not a homotopical functor $\textbf{Ch} \to \textbf{Ch}$. Nonetheless, the obvious functor $\textbf{Ab} \to \textbf{Ch}$ followed by $M \otimes_\mathbb{Z} {-}$ is homotopical, so is its own (absolute) derived functor. On the other hand, if $N$ is an abelian group such that $\textrm{Tor}^1_\mathbb{Z} (M, N)$ is non-zero, then $M \otimes^\textbf{L}_\mathbb{Z} N$ (i.e. the value of the (absolute) left derived functor of $M \otimes_\mathbb{Z} {-}$ at $N$) is not quasi-isomorphic to $M \otimes_\mathbb{Z} N$ (considered as a chain complex concentrated in degree 0). Thus, we have a homotopical functor $\textbf{Ab} \to \textbf{Ch}$ and a left deformable functor $\textbf{Ch} \to \textbf{Ch}$ such that the composite of the (absolute) left derived functors is different from the (absolute) left derived functor of the composite.

What is true is that the universal property of absolute Kan extensions gives you a comparison between the composite of absolute derived functors and the absolute derived functor of the composite.

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