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Reflective subcategory

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In mathematics, a full subcategory A of a category B is said to be reflective in B when the inclusion functor from A to B has a left adjoint. This adjoint is sometimes called a reflector, or localization. Dually, A is said to be coreflective in B when the inclusion functor has a right adjoint.

Informally, a reflector acts as a kind of completion operation. It adds in any "missing" pieces of the structure in such a way that reflecting it again has no further effect.

Definition

A full subcategory A of a category B is said to be reflective in B if for each B-object B there exists an A-object A B {\displaystyle A_{B}} and a B-morphism r B : B A B {\displaystyle r_{B}\colon B\to A_{B}} such that for each B-morphism f : B A {\displaystyle f\colon B\to A} to an A-object A {\displaystyle A} there exists a unique A-morphism f ¯ : A B A {\displaystyle {\overline {f}}\colon A_{B}\to A} with f ¯ r B = f {\displaystyle {\overline {f}}\circ r_{B}=f} .

The pair ( A B , r B ) {\displaystyle (A_{B},r_{B})} is called the A-reflection of B. The morphism r B {\displaystyle r_{B}} is called the A-reflection arrow. (Although often, for the sake of brevity, we speak about A B {\displaystyle A_{B}} only as being the A-reflection of B).

This is equivalent to saying that the embedding functor E : A B {\displaystyle E\colon \mathbf {A} \hookrightarrow \mathbf {B} } is a right adjoint. The left adjoint functor R : B A {\displaystyle R\colon \mathbf {B} \to \mathbf {A} } is called the reflector. The map r B {\displaystyle r_{B}} is the unit of this adjunction.

The reflector assigns to B {\displaystyle B} the A-object A B {\displaystyle A_{B}} and R f {\displaystyle Rf} for a B-morphism f {\displaystyle f} is determined by the commuting diagram

If all A-reflection arrows are (extremal) epimorphisms, then the subcategory A is said to be (extremal) epireflective. Similarly, it is bireflective if all reflection arrows are bimorphisms.

All these notions are special case of the common generalization— E {\displaystyle E} -reflective subcategory, where E {\displaystyle E} is a class of morphisms.

The E {\displaystyle E} -reflective hull of a class A of objects is defined as the smallest E {\displaystyle E} -reflective subcategory containing A. Thus we can speak about reflective hull, epireflective hull, extremal epireflective hull, etc.

An anti-reflective subcategory is a full subcategory A such that the only objects of B that have an A-reflection arrow are those that are already in A.

Dual notions to the above-mentioned notions are coreflection, coreflection arrow, (mono)coreflective subcategory, coreflective hull, anti-coreflective subcategory.

Examples

Algebra

Topology

Functional analysis

Category theory

Properties

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2019)
  • The components of the counit are isomorphisms.
  • If D is a reflective subcategory of C, then the inclusion functor DC creates all limits that are present in C.
  • A reflective subcategory has all colimits that are present in the ambient category.
  • The monad induced by the reflector/localization adjunction is idempotent.

Notes

  1. ^ Mac Lane, Saunders, 1909-2005. (1998). Categories for the working mathematician (2nd ed.). New York: Springer. p. 89. ISBN 0387984038. OCLC 37928530.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Riehl, Emily (2017-03-09). Category theory in context. Mineola, New York. p. 140. ISBN 9780486820804. OCLC 976394474.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. Lawson (1998), p. 63, Theorem 2.
  4. "coreflective subcategory in nLab". ncatlab.org. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
  5. Adámek, Herrlich & Strecker 2004, Example 4.26 A(2).

References

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