Local system

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In mathematics, local coefficients is an idea from algebraic topology, a kind of half-way stage between homology theory or cohomology theory with coefficients in the usual sense, in a fixed abelian group A, and general sheaf cohomology which, roughly speaking, allows coefficients to vary from point to point in a topological space X. Such a concept was introduced by Norman Steenrod.

In sheaf theory terms, a constant sheaf has locally constant functions as its sections. Consider instead a sheaf F, such that locally on X it is a constant sheaf. That means that in a neighbourhood of any x in X, it is isomorphic to a constant sheaf. Then F may be used as a system of local coefficients on X.

Examples arise geometrically from vector bundles with flat connections, and from topology by means of linear representations of the fundamental group.

Larger classes of sheaves are useful: for example the idea of a constructible sheaf in algebraic geometry. These turn out, approximately, to be local coefficients away from a singular set.

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