Category Theory/Categories

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This is the Categories chapter of Category Theory.

Definition

A category consists of four kinds of data subject to three axioms, as listed below:

Data

Objects
has objects A, B, C,…
Morphisms
For each ordered pair of objects A, B in , there is a set of morphisms or arrows from A to B. The notation means that f is a morphism from A to B. The set of all morphisms from A to B is denoted by .
Composition
For each ordered triple of objects A, B, C in , there is a law of composition: If and , then the composite of f and g is a morphism
Identity
For each object A there is a designated identity morphism on A, notated as , from A to A.

Axioms

These data satisfy the following three axioms, of which the first is in the nature of a convention, while the remaining two are more substantial:

Unique typing
and are disjoint unless , .
Associative Law
if the composites are defined. Note that if one composite is defined, the other is necessarily defined.
Identity is a “neutral element”
For the identity morphism associated to each object B, two equations must hold for each pair of objects A and C and each pair of arrows , :

Terminology and fine points

  • If in a category, A is called the domain or source of f, and B is called the codomain or target of f.
  • is called a hom set. In general a hom set may be empty, but for any object A, is not empty because it contains the identity morphism.
  • The hom set may be denoted by or if it is necessary to specify which category is referred to.
  • Morphisms may also be called maps. This does not mean that every morphism in any category is a set function (see #Baby examples and #Preorders). Arrow is a less misleading name.
  • The composite may be written .
  • It might be more natural to write the composite of and as instead of but the usage given here is by far the most common. This stems from the fact that if the arrows are set functions and , then . Thus is best read as "do after ".

Large and small

The definition says that a category 'has' objects and 'has' morphisms. This means that for any category and X is any mathematical object, the statement ' X is an object of ' is either true or false, and similarly for the statement ' X is a morphism of '. The objects (or arrows) of a category need not constitute a set. If they do, the category is said to be small. If they don't, the category is large.

The requirement that the collection of morphisms from A to B be a set makes a category locally small. In this book, all categories are locally small.

Examples of categories

Baby examples

These examples are trivial and maybe uninteresting. But do not underestimate the power of baby examples. For one thing, they are sometimes counterexamples to possible theorems.

0 (the empty category)
This category has no objects and no morphisms.
1
BabyCategory 1.png
The category 1 has one object and one morphism, which must necessarily be the object's identity arrow.
1+1
BabyCategory 1plus1.png
This category has two objects and two morphisms: the identities on each object.
2
BabyCategory 2.png
This category has two objects and three morphisms. The third morphism goes from one object to the other.
Remarks
  • The objects of these baby categories are nodes in a graph (not sets) and the morphisms are arrows in the graph (not functions).
  • For these baby categories we don't have to say what the composition operation does: it is always forced.
  • It is impolite to say that categorists think that 1 + 1 is not equal to 2.

The category of sets

The category of sets, denoted by Set, is this category:

  • The objects are all sets
  • A morphism from a set A to a set B is a function with domain A and codomain B.
  • The composition is the usual composition: If and then is defined by for all .
  • The identity morphism on a set A is the identity function

defined by for .

Terminology and fine points
  • In order to preserve the unique typing in a function definition, it is necessary to include its codomain. For example, is a different function from the inclusion function to some set B properly including A.
  • In most approaches to the foundations of math, the collection of all sets is not a set. This makes Set a large category.

Mathematical structures as categories

Preorders

A preorder α on a set A is a reflexive and transitive relation on A, which means that for all , a α a and for all a, b, c in A, if a α b and b α c, then a α c.

A preorder "is" a category in the following sense: Given a preorder (A, α) the category structure is this:

  • The objects of the category are the elements of A.
  • There is exactly one morphism from a to b if and only if a α b.

The existence of identities is forced by reflexivity and the composition law is forced by transitivity. It follows that the category structure has the property that there is at most one morphism from any object a to any object b.

Conversely, suppose you have a category with set A of objects, with the property that there is at most one morphism between any two objects. Define a relation α on A by requiring that a α b if and only if there is a morphism from a to b. Then (A, α) a preorder.

The statements in the two preceding paragraphs describe an equivalence of categories between the category of small categories and functors and the category of preorders and order-preserving maps.

Remark: Given a preorder, the morphisms of the corresponding category exist by definition. There is exactly one morphism from a to b if and only if a α b. This is an axiomatic definition; in a model a morphism from a to b could be anything, for example the pair (a,b). In no sense is the morphism required to be a function.

Groups

Every group G can be viewed as a category as follows: has one single object; call it e. Therefore it has only one homset , which is defined to be the underlying set of the group G (the arrows are the group elements.) We take as composition the group multiplication. It follows that the identity element of is . Notice that in the category , every morphism is an isomorphism (invertible under composition). Conversely, any one-object category in which all arrows are isomorphisms can be viewed as a group; the elements of the group are the arrows and the multiplication is the composition of the category. This describes an equivalence between the category of groups and homomorphisms and the category of small categories with a single object in which every morphism is an isomorphism.

This can be generalized in two ways.

A category is called a groupoid if every morphism is an isomorphism. Thus a groupoid can be called "a group with many objects."

A monoid is a set with an associative binary operation that has an identity element. By the same technique as for groups, any monoid "is" a category with exactly one object and any category with exactly one object "is" a monoid.

Categories of sets with structure

Finite sets and functions;
groups and homomorphisms;
abelian groups and homomorphisms;
rings and homomorphisms;
subsets of Euclidean space of 3 dimensions and Euclidean movements
subsets of Euclidean space of n dimensions and continuous functions
topological spaces and continuous functions.
Remarks

The law of composition is not specified explicitly in describing these categories. This is the custom when the objects have underlying set-structure, the morphisms are functions of the underlying sets (transporting the additional structure), and the law of composition is merely ordinary function-composition. Indeed, sometimes even the specification of the morphisms is suppressed if no confusion would arise—thus one speaks of the category of groups.

The examples of sets with structure suggest a conceptual framework. For example, the concept of group may be regarded as constituting a first-order abstraction or generalization from various concrete, familiar realizations such as the additive group of integers, the multiplicative group of nonzero rationals, groups of permutations, symmetry groups, groups of Euclidean motions, and so on. Then, again, the notion of a category constitutes a second-order abstraction, the concrete realizations of which consist of such first-order abstractions as the category of groups, the category of rings, the category of topological spaces, and so on.

Properties of objects and morphisms

Isomorphisms

A morphism f: AB in a category is said to be an isomorphism if there is a morphism g: BA in the category with gf = 1A, fg = 1B. It is easy to prove that g is then uniquely determined by f. The morphism g is called the inverse of f, written g = f -1. It follows that f = g-1. If there is an isomorphism from A to B, we say A is isomorphic to B, and it is easy to prove that "isomorphism" is an equivalence relation on the objects of the category.

Examples

  • A function from A to B in the category of sets is an isomorphism if and only if it is bijective.
  • A homomorphism of groups is an isomorphism if and only if it is bijective.
  • The isomorphisms of the category of topological spaces and continuous maps are the homeomorphisms. A bijective continuous map from one topological space to another need not be a homeomorphism because its inverse (as a set function) may not be continuous. An example is the identity map on the set of real numbers, with the domain having the discrete topology and the codomain having the usual topology.

Monomorphisms

Epimorphisms

Initial and terminal objects

is said to be a terminal (or final) object when is a unique morphism for any in . The law of composition ensures that if T and are terminal objects in , they are isomorphic, i.e., is unique up to isomorphism. In the categories of sets, groups, and topological spaces, the terminal objects are singletons, trivial groups, and one-point spaces, respectively. "b" is the terminal object in 2 as depicted above.

Constructions on categories

Subcategories

The product of two categories

Arrow categories