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Monoidal functor

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Monoidal functor

In category theory, monoidal functors are functors between monoidal categories which preserve the monoidal structure. More specifically, a monoidal functor between two monoidal categories consists of a functor between the categories, along with two coherence maps—a natural transformation and a morphism that preserve monoidal multiplication and unit, respectively. Mathematicians require these coherence maps to satisfy additional properties depending on how strictly they want to preserve the monoidal structure; each of these properties gives rise to a slightly different definition of monoidal functors

Contents

  • The coherence maps of lax monoidal functors satisfy no additional properties; they are not necessarily invertible.
  • The coherence maps of strong monoidal functors are invertible.
  • The coherence maps of strict monoidal functors are identity maps.
  • Although we distinguish between these different definitions here, authors may call any one of these simply monoidal functors.

    Definition

    Let ( C , , I C ) and ( D , , I D ) be monoidal categories. A monoidal functor from C to D consists of a functor F : C D together with a natural isomorphism

    ϕ A , B : F A F B F ( A B )

    between C × C D functors and a morphism

    ϕ : I D F I C ,

    called the coherence maps or structure morphisms, which are such that for every three objects A , B and C of C the diagrams

    ,    and   

    commute in the category D . Above, the various natural transformations denoted using α , ρ , λ are parts of the monoidal structure on C and D .

    Variants

  • The dual of a monoidal functor is a comonoidal functor; it is a monoidal functor whose coherence maps are reversed. Comonoidal functors may also be called opmonoidal, colax monoidal, or oplax monoidal functors.
  • A strong monoidal functor is a monoidal functor whose coherence maps ϕ A , B , ϕ are invertible.
  • A strict monoidal functor is a monoidal functor whose coherence maps are identities.
  • A braided monoidal functor is a monoidal functor between braided monoidal categories such that the following diagram commutes for every pair of objects A, B in C  :
  • A symmetric monoidal functor is a braided monoidal functor whose domain and codomain are symmetric monoidal categories.
  • Examples

  • The underlying functor U : ( A b , Z , Z ) ( S e t , × , { } ) from the category of abelian groups to the category of sets. In this case, the map ϕ A , B : U ( A ) × U ( B ) U ( A B ) sends (a, b) to a b ; the map ϕ : { } Z sends to 1.
  • If R is a (commutative) ring, then the free functor S e t , R m o d extends to a strongly monoidal functor ( S e t , , ) ( R m o d , , 0 ) (and also ( S e t , × , { } ) ( R m o d , , R ) if R is commutative).
  • If R S is a homomorphism of commutative rings, then the restriction functor ( S m o d , S , S ) ( R m o d , R , R ) is monoidal and the induction functor ( R m o d , R , R ) ( S m o d , S , S ) is strongly monoidal.
  • An important example of a symmetric monoidal functor is the mathematical model of topological quantum field theory, which has been recently developed. Let B o r d n 1 , n be the category of cobordisms of n-1,n-dimensional manifolds with tensor product given by disjoint union, and unit the empty manifold. A topological quantum field theory in dimension n is a symmetric monoidal functor F : ( B o r d n 1 , n , , ) ( k V e c t , k , k ) .
  • The homology functor is monoidal as ( C h ( R m o d ) , , R [ 0 ] ) ( g r R m o d , , R [ 0 ] ) via the map H ( C 1 ) H ( C 2 ) H ( C 1 C 2 ) , [ x 1 ] [ x 2 ] [ x 1 x 2 ] .
  • Properties

  • If ( M , μ , ϵ ) is a monoid object in C , then ( F C , F μ ϕ C , C , F ϵ ϕ ) is a monoid object in D .
  • Monoidal functors and adjunctions

    Suppose that a functor F : C D is left adjoint to a monoidal ( G , n ) : ( D , , I D ) ( C , , I C ) . Then F has a comonoidal structure ( F , m ) induced by ( G , n ) , defined by

    m A , B = ε F A F B F n F A , F B F ( η A η B ) : F ( A B ) F A F B

    and

    m = ε I D F n : F I C I D .

    If the induced structure on F is strong, then the unit and counit of the adjunction are monoidal natural transformations, and the adjunction is said to be a monoidal adjunction; conversely, the left adjoint of a monoidal adjunction is always a strong monoidal functor.

    Similarly, a right adjoint to a comonoidal functor is monoidal, and the right adjoint of a comonoidal adjunction is a strong monoidal functor.

    References

    Monoidal functor Wikipedia


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