A universal characterization of higher algebraic K-theory
Andrew J. Blumberg, David Gepner, and Goncalo Tabuada

TL;DR
This paper provides a universal characterization of higher algebraic K-theory within small stable infinity categories, establishing it as the universal additive and localizing invariant, and connects it to noncommutative motives and classical invariants.
Contribution
It introduces a universal framework for higher algebraic K-theory using noncommutative motives, unifying various invariants and providing classification results for natural transformations.
Findings
Connective algebraic K-theory is the universal additive invariant.
Non-connective algebraic K-theory is the universal localizing invariant.
Classifies natural transformations from K-theory to THH and TC.
Abstract
In this paper we establish a universal characterization of higher algebraic K-theory in the setting of small stable infinity categories. Specifically, we prove that connective algebraic K-theory is the universal additive invariant, i.e., the universal functor with values in spectra which inverts Morita equivalences, preserves filtered colimits, and satisfies Waldhausen's additivity theorem. Similarly, we prove that non-connective algebraic K-theory is the universal localizing invariant, i.e., the universal functor that moreover satisfies the "Thomason-Trobaugh-Neeman" localization theorem. To prove these results, we construct and study two stable infinity categories of "noncommutative motives"; one associated to additivity and another to localization. In these stable infinity categories, Waldhausen's S. construction corresponds to the suspension functor and connective and…
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