Misplaced Pages

Opposite category

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Dual category) Mathematical category formed by reversing morphisms

In category theory, a branch of mathematics, the opposite category or dual category C of a given category C is formed by reversing the morphisms, i.e. interchanging the source and target of each morphism. Doing the reversal twice yields the original category, so the opposite of an opposite category is the original category itself. In symbols, ( C op ) op = C {\displaystyle (C^{\text{op}})^{\text{op}}=C} .

Examples

  • An example comes from reversing the direction of inequalities in a partial order. So if X is a set and ≤ a partial order relation, we can define a new partial order relation ≤ by
xy if and only if yx.
The new order is commonly called dual order of ≤, and is mostly denoted by ≥. Therefore, duality plays an important role in order theory and every purely order theoretic concept has a dual. For example, there are opposite pairs child/parent, descendant/ancestor, infimum/supremum, down-set/up-set, ideal/filter etc. This order theoretic duality is in turn a special case of the construction of opposite categories as every ordered set can be understood as a category.

Properties

Opposite preserves products:

( C × D ) op C op × D op {\displaystyle (C\times D)^{\text{op}}\cong C^{\text{op}}\times D^{\text{op}}} (see product category)

Opposite preserves functors:

( F u n c t ( C , D ) ) op F u n c t ( C op , D op ) {\displaystyle (\mathrm {Funct} (C,D))^{\text{op}}\cong \mathrm {Funct} (C^{\text{op}},D^{\text{op}})} (see functor category, opposite functor)

Opposite preserves slices:

( F G ) op ( G op F op ) {\displaystyle (F\downarrow G)^{\text{op}}\cong (G^{\text{op}}\downarrow F^{\text{op}})} (see comma category)

See also

References

  1. "Is there an introduction to probability theory from a structuralist/categorical perspective?". MathOverflow. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
  2. (Herrlich & Strecker 1979, p. 99)
  3. O. Wyler, Lecture Notes on Topoi and Quasitopoi, World Scientific, 1991, p. 8.
Category theory
Key concepts
Key concepts
Universal constructions
Limits
Colimits
Algebraic categories
Constructions on categories
A simple triangular commutative diagram
Higher category theory
Key concepts
  • Categorification
  • Enriched category
  • Higher-dimensional algebra
  • Homotopy hypothesis
  • Model category
  • Simplex category
  • String diagram
  • Topos
  • n-categories
    Weak n-categories
    Strict n-categories
    Categorified concepts
    Category: