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If I have a topological monoid ($X,\mu$), a space $Y$ and a homotopy equivalence $f,g$ between them, then $Y$ has the structure of an $A_\infty$ space defined 'pointwise' by $$ y_1 * y_2 := g \left(\mu(f(y_1),f(y_2))\right) $$ Also, I have heard someone say the reverse as "Every $A_\infty$-space is (weakly?) homotopy equivalent to a topological monoid."

My question is this: In how far is this the general case? Can I define/think of $A_\infty$ structures as strict structures as viewed through the distorting glasses of a homotopy equivalence? When is an $A_\infty$ structure of this type - i.e. is there always an equivalent strict version? (I guess no in general. Can you tell me more?)

FYI: I started out with the question: Is the based loop space of a space $X$ always on the other side of a homotopy equivalence of a (strict) topological group?

thanks, a.

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    $\begingroup$ I'm having trouble parsing your question. You can think of A_infty structures as up-to-coherent-homotopy monoid structures. But you may be asking something different. But I think you are asking whether, in any symmetric monoidal model category, an A_infty algebra can be strictified into a strict monoid structure. Is that right? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 11, 2011 at 21:37
  • $\begingroup$ I think your question is the following: "Is every $\Box_\infty$ space homotopy-equivalent to a strict $\Box$ space, for every value of $\Box$?" Is this right? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 11, 2011 at 22:23
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    $\begingroup$ @Theo: What does the "square" symbol stand for? @Clark: I think that that is exactly what he is asking. And I don't know the answer, even in the case of spaces, except in the case when the monoid of components of the space is a group. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 11, 2011 at 22:56
  • $\begingroup$ @Tom: I guess the square is a place holder for arbitrary structures. For example, it could stand for "boolean algebra". I wonder if boolean-algebras-up-to-coherent-homotopy ever show up :) $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 12, 2011 at 3:08
  • $\begingroup$ @Clark: I think that is indeed what I am asking. I am thinking of A_\infty as up-to-coherent-homotopy monoid/group/algebra/..., but I am trying to get a better feel of what exactly that means. It would be nice to be able to think that this was a strict (up-to-identity) monoid/... smudged by a homotopy equivalence. My question thus has two parts: (1) if I have a strict structure and smudge it through a homotopy equivalence, do I get an A_\infty structure? (2) If I have an A_\infty structure, can I assume it arose in this way? $\endgroup$
    – aleph0
    Commented Jan 13, 2011 at 17:30

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The answer to your question about the loop space is a conditional "yes." The conditions are:

i) X should have the homotopy type of a CW complex, and

ii) When we say topological group, we mean with respect to products taken in compactly generated spaces.

With respect to these assumptions, the quickest method to producing the topological group would be:

Step 1) Take the simplicial total singular complex of $X$. This will be a based simplicial set $SX$.

Step 2) Take the Kan loop group of $SX$. This is a simplicial group; denote it by $G(SX)$.

Step 3) Take geometric realization $|G(SX)|$ of $G(SX)$. This will be a topological group object in the category of compactly generated spaces. There is a natural chain of weak homotopy equivalences from the classifying space $BG(SX)$ to $X$. Consequently, $|G(SX)|$ models the loop space of $X$.

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  • $\begingroup$ I wonder if there is a variant of the Kan loop group that only allows "monotone" paths that recovers an associative model from the classifying space of an $A_\infty$ space? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 12, 2011 at 16:56
  • $\begingroup$ I don't know the answer to your question. But there is a construction due to Pawel Gajer which associates an actual topological group $\Omega'X$ and a map $\Omega X \to \Omega'X$ which is a homotopy equivalence when $X$ is a compact smooth manifold with basepoint. Here $\Omega X$ denotes the space of piecewise smooth Moore loops and $\Omega'X$ is gotten by forcing $\Omega X$ to be a group by formally inverting piecewise smooth loops and also rescaling smooth parts of a piecewise smooth Moore loop. $\endgroup$
    – John Klein
    Commented Jan 12, 2011 at 17:01
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This is basically just an elaboration - in particular, it just gives a canonical procedure for what Ben Wieland describes using a two-sided bar construction, and it's standard in the field.

Let $A$ be an $A_\infty$-operad (a non-Σ operad) acting on a space $X$.

First, take singular complexes: $Sing(A)$ then becomes an operad in simplicial sets acting on $Sing(X)$. Taking geometric realization, we get a map of operads $B = |Sing(A)| \to A$, making $X$ a $B$-algebra, and a map $Y = |Sing(X)| \to X$ which is a weak equivalence and a map of $B$-algebras. So without loss of generality we may assume that both our operad and our space are CW; if $X$ was a CW-complex in the first place then $Y$ is actually homotopy eqivalent to $X$.

There is a natural map from the operad $B \to Assoc$ to the associative operad. Each of these operads has an associated monad, taking spaces to the free algebras on that space. I'll abuse notation and use the same letter for the associated monad, so $$ B(Z) = \coprod_{n \geq 0} B(n) \times Z^n. $$ For any CW-complex $Z$, the natural map $B(Z) \to Assoc(Z)$ is a homotopy equivalence.

We then hit this with a two-sided bar construction. We have a simplicial space $$ Bar(B,B,Y) = \{B(Y) \leftleftarrows B(B(Y)) \cdots \} $$ whose structure maps come from the monad's structure maps, and a natural augmentation $|Bar(B,B,Y)| \to Y$ which is a homotopy equivalence of $B$-algebras for formal reasons (the simplicial space has an "extra degeneracy").

We have another simplicial space $$ Bar(Assoc,B,Y) = \{Assoc(Y) \leftleftarrows Assoc(B(Y)) \cdots\} $$ and a natural map of simplicial spaces $Bar(B,B,Y) \to Bar(Assoc,B,Y)$ which is a levelwise homotopy equivalence. Taking geometric realization, we get a map $|Bar(B,B,Y)| \to |Bar(Assoc,B,Y)|$ which is a homotopy equivalence and a map of $B$-algebras, where the latter is actually an algebra over the associative operad.

Net result, we get a diagram of algebras over the $A_\infty$-operad $B$ as follows: $$ |Bar(Assoc,B,Y)| \leftarrow |Bar(B,B,Y)| \to Y \to X $$ Here the left two arrows are homotopy equivalences, the rightmost arrow is a weak equivalence, and the leftmost object is actually strictly associative rather than just an $A_\infty$-algebra.

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    $\begingroup$ Thank you for denoting the associative operad by "$Assoc$." $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 23, 2014 at 14:59
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    $\begingroup$ @CraigWesterland Goodness, yes. There are impressionable young people around and I don't want them confusing it with the Adams spectral sequence. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 24, 2014 at 2:28
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This is a tangential comment. In the monoidal category whose objects are topological monoids, an $A_\infty$ monoid is the same as a space with a little $2$-cubes action whereas a strict monoid is a commutative monoid.

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Some ancient history: The first proof that the loop space of any reasonable space is equivalent to a topological group is due to John Milnor, in his 1956 Annals of Math. paper ``Construction of universal bundles, I'' (I'm sure its hypotheses are removable nowadays.)

Some slightly less ancient history is Theorem 13.5 in my 1972 Springer Volume ``The Geometry of Iterated Loop spaces'', http://www.math.uchicago.edu/~may/BOOKS/geom_iter.pdf on my web page. An $A_{\infty}$-space is a $\mathcal{C}$-space $X$ for any $A_{\infty}$ operad $\mathcal{C}$. In the notation there, I construct a topological monoid $B(M,C,X)$, a $\mathcal{C}$-space $B(C,C,X)$ and a pair of $\mathcal{C}$-maps $B(C,C,X) \longrightarrow X$ and $B(C,C,Z)\longrightarrow B(M,C,X)$. The first is always a homotopy equivalence and the second is always a weak homotopy equivalence, although I only proved that there when $X$ is connected. This is the standard construction that Tyler described in more detail. (I don't think I was yet on Overflow when the question was first asked.)

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Given a map of operads $A\to B$, there is a restriction functor that turns a $B$-algebra into an $A$-algebra. This should have a left adjoint, which should be thought of as a tensor-with-$B$ or induction functor that produces a $B$-algebra from an $A$-algebra by gluing on $B$ along $A$. If these are operads without symmetry and for each $n$, $A(n)\to B(n)$ is an equivalence, then the induction functor should not change the underlying homotopy type (if applied to cofibrant objects, or something). This should cover both that every $A_\infty$-space is equivalent to an associative monoid and that every $A_\infty$-algebra is equivalent to DGA. The latter is written down in many places and usually the construction given generalizes to the induction functor I claim.

The induction functor from $E_\infty$-spaces to commutative monoids in spaces does not preserve homotopy type. That is because of the symmetric group action on operads. The induction functor involves the quotient by the symmetric group. For the induction functor not to change the underlying homotopy type one should ask for something like $A(n)\to B(n)$ is an equivalence not just of underlying objects, but objects-with-group action, which means an equivalence of fixed points for all important subgroups of the symmetric group. I'm not sure which subgroups are important for operads; perhaps symmetric groups or maybe products of them.

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    $\begingroup$ What do you mean by all the shoulds in the first paragraph? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 12, 2011 at 5:23
  • $\begingroup$ The first example of a rigidification theorem like this is that a monoidal category is equivalent to a strict monoidal category. One adds new objects with names like $A\Box B\Box C$, with morphisms by making them isomorphic to $(A\Box B)\Box C$. Another way to say this is that one forms the free strict monoidal category, but then changes the morphisms to make it equivalent to the old category. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 12, 2011 at 17:04
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When is an A_∞ structure of this type - i.e. is there always an equivalent strict version?

Risking unsolicited self-advertising, I would like to point out Proposition 10.1.1 (and the more general Theorem 9.3.6) in arXiv:1410.5675, which identifies the abstract conditions that guarantee that A-monoids can be rectified to strict monoids using the language of Quillen model categories.

The most important condition is that the monoidal model category is flat with respect to the morphism A→Assoc (or rather its individual components), meaning that tensoring a cofibrant object with one of the components gives a weak equivalence. This condition is in fact also necessary, so one can also use it to prove that rectification is impossible. For example, in the symmetric case the analogous condition obviously fails for the morphism E→Comm in simplicial sets, which proves that E-monoids in simplicial sets cannot be rectified to strictly commutative monoids, a result already established by Moore in 1958.

A related i-monoidality condition guarantees the existence of model structures, and both of these conditions are satisfied for a wide range of examples (simplicial sets, topological spaces, chain complexes, simplicial presheaves) and can be moved easily along left Bousfield localizations and transfers (unlike the monoid axiom, which is implied by these two conditions under mild additional assumptions), which significantly expands the range of model categories for which rectification holds, for example, allowing us to prove it for motivic spaces and motivic spectra, as well as other types of symmetric spectra.

The latter is in fact the main novelty of the paper for the nonsymmetric case (which is much easier than the symmetric case (e.g., E), also treated in the paper); rectification of nonsymmetric operads under the assumption of the monoid axiom and a slightly stronger version of flatness was previously established by Muro, but the monoid axiom is much more difficult to carry through left Bousfield localizations and transfers than the combination of flatness and i-monoidality.

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