The Brauer-Picard 2-category of SuperVectR (let's call it sBrPicR) is the homotopy fixed points of the Brauer-Picard 2-category of SuperVectC w.r.t. the involution given by complex conjugation (let's call that involution C).
It is plausible that the Brauer-Picard 2-category of SuperVectH (call it sBrPicH) is the homotopy fixed points of sBrPicC w.r.t the involution C∘J, where J is the involution defined here: What are the "correct" conventions for defining Clifford algebras?
As explained in the above link, J acts homotopy trivially on SuperVectC.
The action of C∘J on the homotopy groups of sBrPicC (which are Z/2,Z/2,C×) is therefore the same as that of C, and so the homotopy fixed points spectral sequence for C∘J looks the same as that for C:
H2(Z/2,π2(sBrPicC))H1(Z/2,π1(sBrPicC))H1(Z/2,π2(sBrPicC))H0(Z/2,π0(sBrPicC))H0(Z/2,π1(sBrPicC))H0(Z/2,π2(sBrPicC))
=Z/2Z/20Z/2Z/2Z/2
But the differential could be different:
there is room for a d2 differential going from (1,0) to (0,2).
That differential is present iff
π0(sBrPicH) has order four, and also iff π1(sBrPicH)=0.
And indeed, π1=0 because the ``odd line'' is not invertible in the category SuperVectH.
So you were right: it looks like π0(sBrPicH)=Z/4.
My answer raises the question of what is the homotopy fixed points of J acting on sBrPicC, or sBrPicR?
I have no reason to believe that this is related to a version of K-theory.
Do you know a version of K-theory related to the category of (non-super) vector spaces? - probably not.
I just don't think that every linear symmetric monoidal category corresponds to a version of K-theory.
This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2016-02-04 18:37 (UTC), posted by SE-user André Henriques