Category Theory

🔢Category Theory Unit 15 – Applications to Algebra and Topology

Category theory provides a unifying framework for algebra and topology, revealing deep connections between seemingly disparate mathematical structures. It abstracts common patterns across fields, using objects, morphisms, and universal properties to describe algebraic and topological concepts. Applications to algebra and topology showcase category theory's power in simplifying proofs, generalizing results, and uncovering new insights. From group theory to homological algebra, and from fundamental groups to cohomology theories, categorical methods offer a fresh perspective on classical mathematical ideas.

Key Concepts and Definitions

  • Categories consist of objects and morphisms between those objects satisfying composition and identity laws
  • Objects in a category can represent various mathematical structures (sets, groups, topological spaces)
  • Morphisms are structure-preserving maps between objects (functions, group homomorphisms, continuous maps)
  • Composition of morphisms f:ABf: A \rightarrow B and g:BCg: B \rightarrow C is a morphism gf:ACg \circ f: A \rightarrow C that satisfies associativity
  • Identity morphisms idA:AAid_A: A \rightarrow A exist for each object AA and satisfy left and right identity laws with composition
  • Isomorphisms are morphisms f:ABf: A \rightarrow B with an inverse g:BAg: B \rightarrow A such that fg=idBf \circ g = id_B and gf=idAg \circ f = id_A
  • Commutative diagrams express equality of compositions of morphisms along different paths (e.g., fg=hkf \circ g = h \circ k)
  • Initial and terminal objects are unique up to isomorphism and have universal properties (e.g., empty set, singleton set)

Algebraic Structures in Category Theory

  • Groups can be viewed as categories with a single object and all morphisms being isomorphisms (group elements)
  • Composition of morphisms in a group category corresponds to the group operation
  • Rings can be viewed as categories with a single object and morphisms representing ring elements
  • Composition of morphisms in a ring category corresponds to ring multiplication
  • Modules over a ring RR form a category with module homomorphisms as morphisms
  • Abelian categories generalize categories of modules and have additional structure (kernels, cokernels, exact sequences)
  • Monoids can be viewed as categories with a single object and a composition operation on morphisms
  • Monoid homomorphisms are functors between monoid categories preserving the composition operation

Topological Spaces as Categories

  • Topological spaces can be viewed as categories with open sets as objects and inclusions as morphisms
  • Continuous maps between topological spaces are functors between the corresponding categories
  • Homotopy equivalences are isomorphisms in the category of topological spaces and homotopy classes of maps
  • The fundamental groupoid of a topological space has points as objects and homotopy classes of paths as morphisms
  • Sheaves on a topological space XX form a category with sheaf morphisms as arrows
    • Sheaves assign data to open sets of XX and satisfy gluing conditions
    • Sheaf cohomology is an important invariant in algebraic geometry and complex analysis

Functors and Natural Transformations

  • Functors are structure-preserving maps between categories that map objects to objects and morphisms to morphisms
  • Functors preserve composition and identity morphisms (e.g., forgetful functors, free functors)
  • Natural transformations are morphisms between functors that commute with the functors' action on morphisms
  • Components of a natural transformation are morphisms in the codomain category indexed by objects of the domain category
  • Natural isomorphisms are natural transformations with invertible components (e.g., double dual of a vector space)
  • Adjoint functors are pairs of functors (F,G)(F, G) with a natural isomorphism between hom-sets Hom(F(A),B)Hom(A,G(B))Hom(F(A), B) \cong Hom(A, G(B))
  • Adjunctions capture universal properties and are ubiquitous in mathematics (e.g., free-forgetful adjunctions)

Universal Properties and Constructions

  • Universal properties characterize objects and morphisms by their relationships with other objects and morphisms
  • Initial objects have a unique morphism to every other object in the category (e.g., empty set, trivial group)
  • Terminal objects have a unique morphism from every other object in the category (e.g., singleton set, trivial group)
  • Products are objects with projections to factors satisfying a universal property (generalize Cartesian products)
  • Coproducts (sums) are dual to products and have injections from factors satisfying a universal property (generalize disjoint unions)
  • Equalizers are limits of parallel morphisms and satisfy a universal property (generalize kernels)
  • Coequalizers are colimits of parallel morphisms and satisfy a universal property (generalize quotients)
  • Pullbacks (fiber products) are limits of diagrams and satisfy a universal property (generalize inverse images)
  • Pushouts are colimits of diagrams and satisfy a universal property (generalize amalgamated sums)

Applications in Algebra

  • Diagram chasing is a technique for proving algebraic statements using commutative diagrams and universal properties
  • Snake lemma relates kernels and cokernels in a commutative diagram of exact sequences
  • Five lemma proves isomorphisms between objects in a commutative diagram of exact sequences
  • Short five lemma is a special case of the five lemma for short exact sequences
  • Homological algebra studies chain complexes and their homology using categorical methods
    • Chain complexes are sequences of objects and morphisms satisfying boundary conditions
    • Homology measures the failure of exactness in a chain complex
  • Derived functors (e.g., Tor, Ext) are obtained by applying a functor to a resolution and taking homology
  • Spectral sequences are algebraic tools for computing homology and cohomology using filtrations and gradings

Applications in Topology

  • Fundamental groupoid of a topological space captures homotopy classes of paths between points
  • Van Kampen theorem computes the fundamental group of a space using a pushout diagram of fundamental groupoids
  • Covering spaces correspond to functors from the fundamental groupoid to the category of sets
  • Galois theory of covering spaces relates subgroups of the fundamental group to covering spaces
  • Simplicial sets are functors from the simplex category to the category of sets and generalize simplicial complexes
  • Singular homology and cohomology are defined using chain complexes of singular simplices (continuous maps from simplices)
  • Čech cohomology is defined using limits of cochains over open covers and agrees with singular cohomology for nice spaces
  • Eilenberg-Steenrod axioms characterize homology and cohomology theories for topological spaces using categorical properties

Advanced Topics and Current Research

  • Higher category theory studies categories with morphisms between morphisms (2-categories) and beyond (n-categories)
  • Homotopy type theory is a foundation for mathematics that combines type theory with homotopy-theoretic ideas
  • Infinity categories (quasicategories) are simplicial sets satisfying weak composition laws and model higher categories
  • Topos theory generalizes sheaves and provides a categorical framework for logic and geometry
  • Monoidal categories have a tensor product operation on objects and morphisms compatible with composition
  • Braided monoidal categories have a braiding isomorphism that swaps the order of the tensor product
  • Symmetric monoidal categories have a symmetry isomorphism that makes the braiding involutive
  • Enriched categories replace hom-sets with objects of a monoidal category (e.g., categories enriched over abelian groups)


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© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.
AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.