Category of functors: Difference between revisions
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imported>Giovanni Antonio DiMatteo |
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# If <math>F</math> is any contravariant functor <math>F:C^{op}\to Sets</math>, then the natural transformations of <math>Mor_C(-,X)</math> to <math>F</math> are in correspondence with the elements of the set <math>F(X)</math>. | # If <math>F</math> is any contravariant functor <math>F:C^{op}\to Sets</math>, then the natural transformations of <math>Mor_C(-,X)</math> to <math>F</math> are in correspondence with the elements of the set <math>F(X)</math>. | ||
# If the functors <math>Mor_C(-,X)</math> and <math>Mor_C(-,X')</math> are isomorphic, then <math>X</math> and <math>X'</math> are isomorphic in <math>C</math>. More generally, the functor | # If the functors <math>Mor_C(-,X)</math> and <math>Mor_C(-,X')</math> are isomorphic, then <math>X</math> and <math>X'</math> are isomorphic in <math>C</math>. More generally, the functor <math>h:C\to Funct(C^{op},Sets)</math>, <math>X\mapsto h_X</math>, is an equivalence of categories between <math>C</math> and the full subcategory of ''representable'' functors in <math>Funct(C^{op},Sets)</math>. | ||
<math>h:C\to Funct(C^{op},Sets)</math>, <math>X\mapsto h_X</math>, is an equivalence of categories between <math>C</math> and the full subcategory of ''representable'' functors in <math>Funct(C^{op},Sets)</math>. | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 16:11, 18 December 2007
This article focuses on the category of contravariant functors between two categories.
The category of functors
Let and be two categories. The category of functors has
- Objects are functors
- A morphism of functors is a natural transformations ; i.e., for each object of , a morphism in such that for all morphisms in , the diagram
commutes.
A natural isomorphism is a natural tranformation such that is an isomorphism in for every object . One can verify that natural isomorphisms are indeed isomorphisms in the category of functors.
Examples
- In the theory of schemes, the presheaves are often referred to as the functor of points of the scheme X. Yoneda's lemma allows one to think of a scheme as a functor in some sense, which becomes a powerful interpretation; indeed, meaningful geometric concepts manifest themselves naturally in this language, including (for example) functorial characterizations of smooth morphisms of schemes.
The Yoneda lemma
Let be a category and let be objects of . Then
- If is any contravariant functor , then the natural transformations of to are in correspondence with the elements of the set .
- If the functors and are isomorphic, then and are isomorphic in . More generally, the functor , , is an equivalence of categories between and the full subcategory of representable functors in .
References
- David Eisenbud; Joe Harris (1998). The Geometry of Schemes. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-98637-5.