I have a bit of a general question. This seems like something you can do, but I can't seem to find much reference for this.. Perhaps something like this already exists in a different guise. But, is there an concept of a complex diffeology analogous to a smooth one?
That is: plots should be defined in terms of maps from open subsets $U \subset \mathbb{C}^{n}$. Axioms concerning compatibility of plots should be defined in terms of analytic maps between $U$ and $V$..etc.
Perhaps there should be extra conditions, or a modification of the conditions, but essentially I'm asking about the existence of a sort of space described by a sheaf on the site of open subsets of $\mathbb{C}^{n}$, or maybe they should be Stein.. If anybody could point me in the direction of anything that may seem relevant, that would be much appreciated.
Thanks!
EDIT:
I have realized that you can (I think!) endow a smooth diffeological space with a "complex/holomorphic structure". It should go something like this:
If $\mathfrak{X}$ is a diffeological space, defined via a collection of plots $ U \rightarrow \mathfrak{X}$, then we can define a complex structure on $\mathfrak{X}$ if there exists a subcollection of plots (perhaps called, holomorphic plots) $ U \rightarrow \mathfrak{X}$ such that:
- $ U \hookrightarrow \mathbb{C}^{n}$ for some $n \geq 0 $ ( and hence $U$ has an induced complex structure )
- If $U$ and $V$ are complex domains, then the composition $ V \rightarrow U \rightarrow \mathfrak{X}$ is a holomorphic plot of $\mathfrak{X}$ if $V \rightarrow U$ is a holomorphic map.
Note that if $V \rightarrow U$ is a holomorphic map, then the composition $V \rightarrow U \rightarrow \mathfrak{X}$ is a (smooth) plot. But it is not guaranteed to be contained in our subcollection of holomorphic plots.
Then, you can also define morphisms of complex diffeological spaces $\mathfrak{X}$, $\mathfrak{Y}$ (i.e. diffeological spaces with complex structures) to be morphisms of diffeological spaces $\mathfrak{X} \rightarrow \mathfrak{Y}$ that is compatible with the choices of holomorphic plots. That is, if $U \rightarrow \mathfrak{X}$ is a holomorphic plot, then $ U \rightarrow \mathfrak{X} \rightarrow \mathfrak{Y}$ should also be a holomorphic plot.
I believe that this is sound, and you can embed complex manifolds into diffeologies with complex structure this way. However, if this is indeed sound, I wonder what the relationship would be if you started off by defining a concrete sheaf on the concrete site of open domains in $\mathbb{C}^{n}$ (or Stein manifolds..etc), as in Enxin Wu's thesis linked in ARA's comment below.