Spectral spaces are a class of topological spaces. They are a tool linking algebraic structures, in a very wide sense, with geometry. They were invented to give a functional representation of Boolean algebras and distributive lattices and subsequently gained great prominence as a consequence of Grothendieck's invention of schemes. There are more than 1,000 research articles about spectral spaces, but this is the first monograph. It provides an introduction to the subject and is a unified treatment of results scattered across the literature, filling in gaps and showing the connections between different results. The book includes new research going beyond the existing literature, answering questions that naturally arise from this comprehensive approach. The authors serve graduates by starting gently with the basics. For experts, they lead them to the frontiers of current research, making this book a valuable reference source.
Presents many applications of spectral spaces, their benefits, and how they naturally arise in different contexts
Contains a large number of examples and counterexamples to help the reader learn the material
Comprehensive indexes make the book a useful reference resource
Author(s): Max Dickmann, Niels Schwartz , Marcus Tressl
Series: New Mathematical Monographs (35)
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 633
Tags: Logic, Categories and Sets, Recreational Mathematics, Geometry and Topology, Mathematics
Outline of the history of spectral spaces
1. Spectral spaces and spectral maps
2. Basic constructions
3. Stone duality
4. Subsets of spectral spaces
5. Properties of spectral maps
6. Quotient constructions
7. Scott topology and coarse lower topology
8. Special classes of spectral spaces
9. Localic spaces
10. Colimits in Spec
11. Relations of Spec with other categories
12. The Zariski spectrum
13. The real spectrum
14. Spectral spaces via model theory
Appendix. The poset zoo
References
Index of categories and functors
Index of examples
Symbol index
Subject index