Enough Injectives
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Enough Injectives
In mathematics, especially in the field of category theory, the concept of injective object is a generalization of the concept of injective module. This concept is important in cohomology, in homotopy theory and in the theory of model categories. The dual notion is that of a projective object. Definition An object Q in a category \mathbf is said to be injective if for every monomorphism f: X \to Y and every morphism g: X \to Q there exists a morphism h: Y \to Q extending g to Y, i.e. such that h \circ f = g. That is, every morphism X \to Q factors through every monomorphism X \hookrightarrow Y. The morphism h in the above definition is not required to be uniquely determined by f and g. In a locally small category, it is equivalent to require that the hom functor \operatorname_(-,Q) carries monomorphisms in \mathbf to surjective set maps. In Abelian categories The notion of injectivity was first formulated for abelian categories, and this is still one of its primary are ...
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Mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics with the major subdisciplines of number theory, algebra, geometry, and analysis, respectively. There is no general consensus among mathematicians about a common definition for their academic discipline. Most mathematical activity involves the discovery of properties of abstract objects and the use of pure reason to prove them. These objects consist of either abstractions from nature orin modern mathematicsentities that are stipulated to have certain properties, called axioms. A ''proof'' consists of a succession of applications of deductive rules to already established results. These results include previously proved theorems, axioms, andin case of abstraction from naturesome basic properties that are considered true starting points of ...
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Exact Functor
In mathematics, particularly homological algebra, an exact functor is a functor that preserves short exact sequences. Exact functors are convenient for algebraic calculations because they can be directly applied to presentations of objects. Much of the work in homological algebra is designed to cope with functors that ''fail'' to be exact, but in ways that can still be controlled. Definitions Let P and Q be abelian categories, and let be a covariant additive functor (so that, in particular, ''F''(0) = 0). We say that ''F'' is an exact functor if whenever :0 \to A\ \stackrel \ B\ \stackrel \ C \to 0 is a short exact sequence in P then :0 \to F(A) \ \stackrel \ F(B)\ \stackrel \ F(C) \to 0 is a short exact sequence in Q. (The maps are often omitted and implied, and one says: "if 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact, then 0→''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'')→0 is also exact".) Further, we say that ''F'' is *left-exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→' ...
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Tight Span
In metric geometry, the metric envelope or tight span of a metric space ''M'' is an injective metric space into which ''M'' can be embedded. In some sense it consists of all points "between" the points of ''M'', analogous to the convex hull of a point set in a Euclidean space. The tight span is also sometimes known as the injective envelope or hyperconvex hull of ''M''. It has also been called the injective hull, but should not be confused with the injective hull of a module in algebra, a concept with a similar description relative to the category of ''R''-modules rather than metric spaces. The tight span was first described by , and it was studied and applied by Holsztyński in the 1960s. It was later independently rediscovered by and ; see for this history. The tight span is one of the central constructions of T-theory. Definition The tight span of a metric space can be defined as follows. Let (''X'',''d'') be a metric space, and let ''T''(''X'') be the set of extremal functio ...
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Injective Metric Space
In metric geometry, an injective metric space, or equivalently a hyperconvex metric space, is a metric space with certain properties generalizing those of the real line and of L∞ distances in higher-dimensional vector spaces. These properties can be defined in two seemingly different ways: hyperconvexity involves the intersection properties of closed balls in the space, while injectivity involves the isometric embeddings of the space into larger spaces. However it is a theorem of that these two different types of definitions are equivalent. Hyperconvexity A metric space X is said to be hyperconvex if it is convex and its closed balls have the binary Helly property. That is: #Any two points x and y can be connected by the isometric image of a line segment of length equal to the distance between the points (i.e. X is a path space). #If F is any family of closed balls _r(p) = \ such that each pair of balls in F meets, then there exists a point x common to all the balls in F. ...
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Category Of Metric Spaces
In category theory, Met is a category that has metric spaces as its objects and metric maps (continuous functions between metric spaces that do not increase any pairwise distance) as its morphisms. This is a category because the composition of two metric maps is again a metric map. It was first considered by . Arrows The monomorphisms in Met are the injective metric maps. The epimorphisms are the metric maps for which the domain of the map has a dense image in the range. The isomorphisms are the isometries, i.e. metric maps which are injective, surjective, and distance-preserving. As an example, the inclusion of the rational numbers into the real numbers is a monomorphism and an epimorphism, but it is clearly not an isomorphism; this example shows that Met is not a balanced category. Objects The empty metric space is the initial object of Met; any singleton metric space is a terminal object. Because the initial object and the terminal objects differ, there are no zero object ...
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Injective Hull
In mathematics, particularly in algebra, the injective hull (or injective envelope) of a module is both the smallest injective module containing it and the largest essential extension of it. Injective hulls were first described in . Definition A module ''E'' is called the injective hull of a module ''M'', if ''E'' is an essential extension of ''M'', and ''E'' is injective. Here, the base ring is a ring with unity, though possibly non-commutative. Examples * An injective module is its own injective hull. * The injective hull of an integral domain is its field of fractions . * The injective hull of a cyclic ''p''-group (as Z-module) is a Prüfer group . * The injective hull of ''R''/rad(''R'') is Hom''k''(''R'',''k''), where ''R'' is a finite-dimensional ''k''-algebra with Jacobson radical rad(''R'') . * A simple module is necessarily the socle of its injective hull. * The injective hull of the residue field of a discrete valuation ring (R,\mathfrak,k) where \mathfrak = x\cdot ...
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Module Homomorphism
In algebra, a module homomorphism is a function between modules that preserves the module structures. Explicitly, if ''M'' and ''N'' are left modules over a ring ''R'', then a function f: M \to N is called an ''R''-''module homomorphism'' or an ''R''-''linear map'' if for any ''x'', ''y'' in ''M'' and ''r'' in ''R'', :f(x + y) = f(x) + f(y), :f(rx) = rf(x). In other words, ''f'' is a group homomorphism (for the underlying additive groups) that commutes with scalar multiplication. If ''M'', ''N'' are right ''R''-modules, then the second condition is replaced with :f(xr) = f(x)r. The preimage of the zero element under ''f'' is called the kernel of ''f''. The set of all module homomorphisms from ''M'' to ''N'' is denoted by \operatorname_R(M, N). It is an abelian group (under pointwise addition) but is not necessarily a module unless ''R'' is commutative. The composition of module homomorphisms is again a module homomorphism, and the identity map on a module is a module homomorphism. ...
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Module (mathematics)
In mathematics, a module is a generalization of the notion of vector space in which the field of scalars is replaced by a ring. The concept of ''module'' generalizes also the notion of abelian group, since the abelian groups are exactly the modules over the ring of integers. Like a vector space, a module is an additive abelian group, and scalar multiplication is distributive over the operation of addition between elements of the ring or module and is compatible with the ring multiplication. Modules are very closely related to the representation theory of groups. They are also one of the central notions of commutative algebra and homological algebra, and are used widely in algebraic geometry and algebraic topology. Introduction and definition Motivation In a vector space, the set of scalars is a field and acts on the vectors by scalar multiplication, subject to certain axioms such as the distributive law. In a module, the scalars need only be a ring, so the module conc ...
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Divisible Group
In mathematics, especially in the field of group theory, a divisible group is an abelian group in which every element can, in some sense, be divided by positive integers, or more accurately, every element is an ''n''th multiple for each positive integer ''n''. Divisible groups are important in understanding the structure of abelian groups, especially because they are the injective abelian groups. Definition An abelian group (G, +) is divisible if, for every positive integer n and every g \in G, there exists y \in G such that ny=g. An equivalent condition is: for any positive integer n, nG=G, since the existence of y for every n and g implies that n G\supseteq G, and the other direction n G\subseteq G is true for every group. A third equivalent condition is that an abelian group G is divisible if and only if G is an injective object in the category of abelian groups; for this reason, a divisible group is sometimes called an injective group. An abelian group is p-divisible for ...
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Group Homomorphism
In mathematics, given two groups, (''G'', ∗) and (''H'', ·), a group homomorphism from (''G'', ∗) to (''H'', ·) is a function ''h'' : ''G'' → ''H'' such that for all ''u'' and ''v'' in ''G'' it holds that : h(u*v) = h(u) \cdot h(v) where the group operation on the left side of the equation is that of ''G'' and on the right side that of ''H''. From this property, one can deduce that ''h'' maps the identity element ''eG'' of ''G'' to the identity element ''eH'' of ''H'', : h(e_G) = e_H and it also maps inverses to inverses in the sense that : h\left(u^\right) = h(u)^. \, Hence one can say that ''h'' "is compatible with the group structure". Older notations for the homomorphism ''h''(''x'') may be ''x''''h'' or ''x''''h'', though this may be confused as an index or a general subscript. In automata theory, sometimes homomorphisms are written to the right of their arguments without parentheses, so that ''h''(''x'') becomes simply xh. In areas of mathematics where one ...
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Abelian Group
In mathematics, an abelian group, also called a commutative group, is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written. That is, the group operation is commutative. With addition as an operation, the integers and the real numbers form abelian groups, and the concept of an abelian group may be viewed as a generalization of these examples. Abelian groups are named after early 19th century mathematician Niels Henrik Abel. The concept of an abelian group underlies many fundamental algebraic structures, such as fields, rings, vector spaces, and algebras. The theory of abelian groups is generally simpler than that of their non-abelian counterparts, and finite abelian groups are very well understood and fully classified. Definition An abelian group is a set A, together with an operation \cdot that combines any two elements a and b of A to form another element of A, denoted a \cdot b. The symbo ...
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Up To
Two Mathematical object, mathematical objects ''a'' and ''b'' are called equal up to an equivalence relation ''R'' * if ''a'' and ''b'' are related by ''R'', that is, * if ''aRb'' holds, that is, * if the equivalence classes of ''a'' and ''b'' with respect to ''R'' are equal. This figure of speech is mostly used in connection with expressions derived from equality, such as uniqueness or count. For example, ''x'' is unique up to ''R'' means that all objects ''x'' under consideration are in the same equivalence class with respect to the relation ''R''. Moreover, the equivalence relation ''R'' is often designated rather implicitly by a generating condition or transformation. For example, the statement "an integer's prime factorization is unique up to ordering" is a concise way to say that any two lists of prime factors of a given integer are equivalent with respect to the relation ''R'' that relates two lists if one can be obtained by reordering (permutation) from the other. As anot ...
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