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Functor category





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Incategory theory, a branch of mathematics, a functor category is a category where the objects are the functors and the morphisms are natural transformations between the functors (here, is another object in the category). Functor categories are of interest for two main reasons:

  • every category embeds in a functor category (via the Yoneda embedding); the functor category often has nicer properties than the original category, allowing certain operations that were not available in the original setting.
  • Definition

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    Suppose   is a small category (i.e. the objects and morphisms form a set rather than a proper class) and   is an arbitrary category. The category of functors from  to , written as Fun( ,  ), Funct( , ),  , or  , has as objects the covariant functors from  to , and as morphisms the natural transformations between such functors. Note that natural transformations can be composed: if   is a natural transformation from the functor   to the functor  , and   is a natural transformation from the functor   to the functor  , then the composition   defines a natural transformation from  to . With this composition of natural transformations (known as vertical composition, see natural transformation),   satisfies the axioms of a category.

    In a completely analogous way, one can also consider the category of all contravariant functors from  to ; we write this as Funct( ).

    If  and   are both preadditive categories (i.e. their morphism sets are abelian groups and the composition of morphisms is bilinear), then we can consider the category of all additive functors from  to , denoted by Add( , ).

    Examples

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    Facts

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    Most constructions that can be carried out in   can also be carried out in   by performing them "componentwise", separately for each object in  . For instance, if any two objects   and  in  have a product  , then any two functors   and  in  have a product  , defined by   for every object  in . Similarly, if   is a natural transformation and each   has a kernel   in the category  , then the kernel of   in the functor category   is the functor   with   for every object  in .

    As a consequence we have the general rule of thumb that the functor category   shares most of the "nice" properties of  :

    We also have:

    So from the above examples, we can conclude right away that the categories of directed graphs,  -sets and presheaves on a topological space are all complete and cocomplete topoi, and that the categories of representations of  , modules over the ring  , and presheaves of abelian groups on a topological space   are all abelian, complete and cocomplete.

    The embedding of the category   in a functor category that was mentioned earlier uses the Yoneda lemma as its main tool. For every object  of , let   be the contravariant representable functor from  to . The Yoneda lemma states that the assignment

     

    is a full embedding of the category   into the category Funct( , ). So   naturally sits inside a topos.

    The same can be carried out for any preadditive category  : Yoneda then yields a full embedding of   into the functor category Add( , ). So   naturally sits inside an abelian category.

    The intuition mentioned above (that constructions that can be carried out in   can be "lifted" to  ) can be made precise in several ways; the most succinct formulation uses the language of adjoint functors. Every functor   induces a functor   (by composition with  ). If   and   is a pair of adjoint functors, then   and   is also a pair of adjoint functors.

    The functor category   has all the formal properties of an exponential object; in particular the functors from   stand in a natural one-to-one correspondence with the functors from  to . The category   of all small categories with functors as morphisms is therefore a cartesian closed category.

    See also

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    References

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    1. ^ Tom Leinster (2004). Higher Operads, Higher Categories. Cambridge University Press. Bibcode:2004hohc.book.....L. Archived from the original on 2003-10-25.

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Functor_category&oldid=1166106424"
     



    Last edited on 19 July 2023, at 11:27  





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    This page was last edited on 19 July 2023, at 11:27 (UTC).

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