Information about Equivalence Of Categories
In category theory, an abstract branch of mathematics, an
equivalence of categories is a relation between two categories that establishes that these categories are "essentially the same".
There are numerous examples of categorical equivalences from many
areas of mathematics.
Establishing such an equivalence usually means to discover
strong similarities between mathematical structures that formerly were considered
to be unrelated or where the relation was not understood properly.
The gain of this usually is a better understanding of the
nature of the considered objects and the possibility to translate theorems between different kinds of mathematical structures.
If a category is equivalent to the opposite (or dual) of another category then one speaks of
a duality of categories, and says that the two categories are dually equivalent.
An equivalence of categories consists of a functor between the involved categories, which is required to have an "inverse" functor. However, in contrast to the situation common for isomorphisms in an algebraic setting, the composition of the functor and its "inverse" is not necessarily the identity mapping. Instead it is sufficient that each object be naturally isomorphic to its image under this composition. Thus one may describe the functors as being "inverse up to isomorphism". There is indeed a concept of isomorphism of categories where a strict form of inverse functor is required, but this is of much less practical use than the equivalence concept.
One often does not specify all the above data. For instance, we say that the categories C and D are equivalent (respectively dually equivalent) if there exists an equivalence (respectively duality) between them. Furthermore, we say that F "is" an equivalence of categories if an inverse functor G and natural isomorphisms as above exist. Note however that knowledge of F is usually not enough to reconstruct G and the natural isomorphisms: there may be many choices (see example below).
There is also a close relation to the concept of adjoint functors. The following statements are equivalent for functors F : C → D and G : D → C:
If F : C → D is an equivalence of categories, and G1 and G2 are two inverses, then G1 and G2 are naturally isomorphic.
If F : C → D is an equivalence of categories, and if C is a preadditive category (or additive category, or abelian category), then D may be turned into a preadditive category (or additive category, or abelian category) in such a way that F becomes an additive functor. On the other hand, any equivalence between additive categories is necessarily additive. (Note that the latter statement is not true for equivalences between preadditive categories.)
An auto-equivalence of a category C is an equivalence F : C → C. The auto-equivalences of C form a group under composition if we consider two auto-equivalences that are naturally isomorphic to be identical. This group captures the essential "symmetries" of C. (One caveat: if C is not a small category, then the auto-equivalences of C may form a proper class rather than a set.)
An equivalence of categories consists of a functor between the involved categories, which is required to have an "inverse" functor. However, in contrast to the situation common for isomorphisms in an algebraic setting, the composition of the functor and its "inverse" is not necessarily the identity mapping. Instead it is sufficient that each object be naturally isomorphic to its image under this composition. Thus one may describe the functors as being "inverse up to isomorphism". There is indeed a concept of isomorphism of categories where a strict form of inverse functor is required, but this is of much less practical use than the equivalence concept.
Definition
Formally, given two categories C and D, an equivalence of categories consists of a functor F : C → D, a functor G : D → C, and two natural isomorphisms η: FG→ID and ε: IC→GF. Here FG: D→D and GF: C→C, denote the respective compositions of F and G, and IC: C→C and ID: D→D denote the identity functors on C and D, assigning each object and morphism to itself. If F and G are contravariant functors one speaks of a duality of categories instead.One often does not specify all the above data. For instance, we say that the categories C and D are equivalent (respectively dually equivalent) if there exists an equivalence (respectively duality) between them. Furthermore, we say that F "is" an equivalence of categories if an inverse functor G and natural isomorphisms as above exist. Note however that knowledge of F is usually not enough to reconstruct G and the natural isomorphisms: there may be many choices (see example below).
Equivalent characterizations
One can show that a functor F : C → D yields an equivalence of categories if and only if it is:- full, i.e. for any two objects c1 and c2 of C, the map HomC(c1,c2) → HomD(Fc1,Fc2) induced by F is surjective;
- faithful, i.e. for any two objects c1 and c2 of C, the map HomC(c1,c2) → HomD(Fc1,Fc2) induced by F is injective; and
- essentially surjective, i.e. each object d in D is isomorphic to an object of the form Fc, for c in C.
There is also a close relation to the concept of adjoint functors. The following statements are equivalent for functors F : C → D and G : D → C:
- There are natural isomorphisms from FG to ID and IC to GF called the co-unit and unit resp.
- F is a left adjoint of G and both functors are full and faithful.
- F is a right adjoint of G and both functors are full and faithful.
Examples
- Consider the category C having a single object c and a single morphism 1c, and the category D with two objects d1, d2 and four morphisms: two identity morphisms 1d1, 1d2 and two isomorphisms α:d1→d2 and β:d2→d1. The categories C and D are equivalent; we can (for example) have F map c to d1 and G map both objects of D to c and all morphisms to 1c.
- By contrast, the category C with a single object and a single morphism is not equivalent to the category E with two objects and only two identity morphisms as the two objects therein are not isomorphic.
- Consider a category C with one object c, and two morphisms 1, f: c→c. Let 1 be the identity morphism on c and set f o f = 1. Of course, C is equivalent to itself, which can be shown by taking 1 in place of the required natural isomorphisms between the functor IC and itself. However, it is also true that f yields a natural isomorphism from IC to itself. Hence, given the information that the identity functors form an equivalence of categories, in this example one still can choose between two natural isomorphisms for each direction.
- Consider the category C of finite-dimensional real vector spaces, and the category D = Mat(R) of all real matrices (the latter category is explained in the article on additive categories). Then C and D are equivalent: The functor G : D → C which maps the object An of D to the vector space Rn and the matrices in D to the corresponding linear maps is full, faithful and essentially surjective.
- One of the central themes of algebraic geometry is the duality of the category of affine schemes and the category of commutative rings. The functor G associates to every commutative ring its spectrum, the scheme defined by the prime ideals of the ring. Its adjoint F associates to every affine scheme its ring of global sections.
- In functional analysis the category of commutative C*-algebras with identity is contravariantly equivalent to the category of compact Hausdorff spaces. Under this duality, every compact Hausdorff space X is associated with the algebra of continuous complex-valued functions on X, and every commutative C*-algebra is associated with the space of its maximal ideals. This is the Gelfand representation.
- In lattice theory, there are a number of dualities, based on representation theorems that connect certain classes of lattices to classes of topological spaces. Probably the most well-known theorem of this kind is Stone's representation theorem for Boolean algebras, which is a special instance within the general scheme of Stone duality. Each Boolean algebra B is mapped to a specific topology on the set of ultrafilters of B. Conversely, for any topology the clopen (i.e. closed and open) subsets yield a Boolean algebra. One obtains a duality between the category of Boolean algebras (with their homomorphisms) and Stone spaces (with continuous mappings).
- In pointless topology the category of spatial locales is known to be equivalent to the dual of the category of sober spaces.
- Any category is equivalent to its skeleton.
Properties
As a rule of thumb, an equivalence of categories preserves all "categorical" concepts and properties. If F : C → D is an equivalence, then the following statements are all true:- the object c of C is an initial object (or terminal object, or zero object), if and only if Fc is an initial object (or terminal object, or zero object) of D
- the morphism α in C is a monomorphism (or epimorphism, or isomorphism), if and only if Fα is a monomorphism (or epimorphism, or isomorphism) in D.
- the functor H : I → C has limit (or colimit) l if and only if the functor FH : I → D has limit (or colimit) Fl. This can be applied to equalizers, products and coproducts among others. Applying it to kernels and cokernels, we see that the equivalence F is an exact functor.
- C is a cartesian closed category (or a topos) if and only if D is cartesian closed (or a topos).
If F : C → D is an equivalence of categories, and G1 and G2 are two inverses, then G1 and G2 are naturally isomorphic.
If F : C → D is an equivalence of categories, and if C is a preadditive category (or additive category, or abelian category), then D may be turned into a preadditive category (or additive category, or abelian category) in such a way that F becomes an additive functor. On the other hand, any equivalence between additive categories is necessarily additive. (Note that the latter statement is not true for equivalences between preadditive categories.)
An auto-equivalence of a category C is an equivalence F : C → C. The auto-equivalences of C form a group under composition if we consider two auto-equivalences that are naturally isomorphic to be identical. This group captures the essential "symmetries" of C. (One caveat: if C is not a small category, then the auto-equivalences of C may form a proper class rather than a set.)
In mathematics, category theory deals in an abstract way with mathematical structures and relationships between them. Categories now appear in most branches of mathematics and in some areas of theoretical computer science and mathematical physics, and have been a unifying notion.
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Mathematics (colloquially, maths or math) is the body of knowledge centered on such concepts as quantity, structure, space, and change, and also the academic discipline that studies them. Benjamin Peirce called it "the science that draws necessary conclusions".
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In category theory, an abstract branch of mathematics, the dual category or opposite category Cop of a category C is the category formed by reversing all the morphisms of C.
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functor is a special type of mapping between categories. Functors can be thought of as morphisms in the category of small categories.
Functors were first considered in algebraic topology, where algebraic objects (like the fundamental group) are associated to topological
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Functors were first considered in algebraic topology, where algebraic objects (like the fundamental group) are associated to topological
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In mathematics, an isomorphism (Greek: isos "equal", and morphe "shape") is a bijective map f such that both f and its inverse f −1 are homomorphisms, i.e., structure-preserving mappings.
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natural transformation provides a way of transforming one functor into another while respecting the internal structure (i.e. the composition of morphisms) of the categories involved. Hence, a natural transformation can be considered to be a "morphism of functors".
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In category theory, two categories C and D are isomorphic if there exist functors F : C → D and G : D → C which are mutually inverse to each other, i.e.
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In category theory, a faithful functor (resp. a full functor) is a functor which is injective (resp. surjective) when restricted to each set of morphisms with a given source and target.
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non-surjective function.]] In mathematics, a function f is said to be surjective if its values span its whole codomain; that is, for every y in the codomain, there is at least one x in the domain such that f(x) = y .
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In category theory, a faithful functor (resp. a full functor) is a functor which is injective (resp. surjective) when restricted to each set of morphisms with a given source and target.
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non-injective function.]] In mathematics, an injective function is a function which associates distinct arguments to distinct values. More precisely, a function f is said to be injective if it maps distinct x in the domain to distinct y
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essentially surjective when each object of is isomorphic to an object of the form for some object of .
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axiom of choice, or AC, is an axiom of set theory. Intuitively speaking, the axiom of choice says that given any collection of bins, each containing at least one object, exactly one object can be selected from each bin and all placed into one collecting bin—even if
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In mathematics, adjoint functors are pairs of functors which stand in a particular relationship with one another. Such functors are ubiquitous in mathematics. Adjoint functors are studied in a branch of mathematics known as category theory.
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In mathematics, the dimension of a vector space V is the cardinality (i.e. the number of vectors) of a basis of V. It is sometimes called Hamel dimension or algebraic dimension to distinguish it from other types of dimension.
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In mathematics, the real numbers may be described informally as numbers that can be given by an infinite decimal representation, such as 2.4871773339…. The real numbers include both rational numbers, such as 42 and −23/129, and irrational numbers, such as π and
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In mathematics, a vector space (or linear space) is a collection of objects (called vectors) that, informally speaking, may be scaled and added. More formally, a vector space is a set on which two operations, called (vector) addition and (scalar) multiplication, are
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matrix (plural matrices) is a rectangular table of elements (or entries), which may be numbers or, more generally, any abstract quantities that can be added and multiplied.
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In mathematics, specifically in category theory, an additive category is a preadditive category C such that any finitely many objects A1,...,An of C have a biproduct A1
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Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics which, as the name suggests, combines techniques of abstract algebra, especially commutative algebra, with the language and the problematics of geometry.
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In abstract algebra and algebraic geometry, the spectrum of a commutative ring R, denoted by Spec(R), is defined to be the set of all proper prime ideals of R.
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In ring theory, a branch of abstract algebra, a commutative ring is a ring in which the multiplication operation obeys the commutative law. This means that if a and b are any elements of the ring, then a×b=b×a.
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In abstract algebra and algebraic geometry, the spectrum of a commutative ring R, denoted by Spec(R), is defined to be the set of all proper prime ideals of R.
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In mathematics, a prime ideal is a subset of a ring which shares many important properties of a prime number in the ring of integers. Prime ideals have a simpler description for commutative rings, so we consider this case separately below.
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Functional analysis is the branch of mathematics, and specifically of analysis, concerned with the study of vector spaces and operators acting upon them. It has its historical roots in the study of functional spaces, in particular transformations of functions, such as the Fourier
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C*-algebras are an important area of research in functional analysis, a branch of mathematics. The prototypical example of a C*-algebra is a complex algebra, A, of linear operators on a complex Hilbert space with two additional properties:
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- A
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Rn is called compact if it is closed and bounded. For example, in R, the closed unit interval [0, 1] is compact, but the set of integers Z is not (it is not bounded) and neither is the half-open interval [0, 1) (it is not closed).
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Topological spaces in
separation axiom
Kolmogorov (T0) version
T0 | T1 | T2 | T2½ | completely T2
T3 | T3½ | T4 | T5 | T6
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separation axiom
Kolmogorov (T0) version
T0 | T1 | T2 | T2½ | completely T2
T3 | T3½ | T4 | T5 | T6
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Ideal may refer to:
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- Ideal (ethics), principles or values that one actively pursues as goals
- Platonic ideal, a philosophical idea of trueness of form, associated with Plato
In mathematics
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In mathematics, the Gelfand representation in functional analysis allows a complete characterisation of commutative C*-algebras as algebras of continuous complex-valued functions. Alternatively, it is a way of representing commutative Banach algebras as continous functions.
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