Preadditive Categories
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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 ...
, specifically in
category theory Category theory is a general theory of mathematical structures and their relations that was introduced by Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane in the middle of the 20th century in their foundational work on algebraic topology. Nowadays, cate ...
, a preadditive category is another name for an Ab-category, i.e., a category that is enriched over the
category of abelian groups In mathematics, the category Ab has the abelian groups as objects and group homomorphisms as morphisms. This is the prototype of an abelian category: indeed, every small abelian category can be embedded in Ab. Properties The zero object of Ab is ...
, Ab. That is, an Ab-category C is a category such that every hom-set Hom(''A'',''B'') in C has the structure of an abelian group, and composition of morphisms is bilinear, in the sense that composition of morphisms distributes over the group operation. In formulas: f\circ (g + h) = (f\circ g) + (f\circ h) and (f + g)\circ h = (f\circ h) + (g\circ h), where + is the group operation. Some authors have used the term ''additive category'' for preadditive categories, but here we follow the current trend of reserving this term for certain special preadditive categories (see below).


Examples

The most obvious example of a preadditive category is the category Ab itself. More precisely, Ab is a closed monoidal category. Note that
commutativity In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result. It is a fundamental property of many binary operations, and many mathematical proofs depend on it. Most familiar as the name of ...
is crucial here; it ensures that the sum of two group homomorphisms is again a homomorphism. In contrast, the category of all groups is not closed. See
Medial category In mathematics, the category of medial magmas, also known as the medial category, and denoted Med, is the category whose objects are medial magmas (that is, sets with a medial binary operation), and whose morphisms are magma homomorphisms (which ...
. Other common examples: * The category of (left) modules over a ring ''R'', in particular: ** the category of vector spaces over a field ''K''. * The algebra of matrices over a ring, thought of as a category as described in the article
Additive category In mathematics, specifically in category theory, an additive category is a preadditive category C admitting all finitary biproducts. Definition A category C is preadditive if all its hom-sets are abelian groups and composition of m ...
. * Any ring, thought of as a category with only one object, is a preadditive category. Here composition of morphisms is just ring multiplication and the unique hom-set is the underlying abelian group. These will give you an idea of what to think of; for more examples, follow the links to below.


Elementary properties

Because every hom-set Hom(''A'',''B'') is an abelian group, it has a zero element 0. This is the zero morphism from ''A'' to ''B''. Because composition of morphisms is bilinear, the composition of a zero morphism and any other morphism (on either side) must be another zero morphism. If you think of composition as analogous to multiplication, then this says that multiplication by zero always results in a product of zero, which is a familiar intuition. Extending this analogy, the fact that composition is bilinear in general becomes the distributivity of multiplication over addition. Focusing on a single object ''A'' in a preadditive category, these facts say that the endomorphism hom-set Hom(''A'',''A'') is a ring, if we define multiplication in the ring to be composition. This ring is the endomorphism ring of ''A''. Conversely, every ring (with identity) is the endomorphism ring of some object in some preadditive category. Indeed, given a ring ''R'', we can define a preadditive category R to have a single object ''A'', let Hom(''A'',''A'') be ''R'', and let composition be ring multiplication. Since ''R'' is an abelian group and multiplication in a ring is bilinear (distributive), this makes R a preadditive category. Category theorists will often think of the ring ''R'' and the category R as two different representations of the same thing, so that a particularly
perverse Perversion is a form of human behavior which deviates from what is considered to be orthodox or normal. Although the term ''perversion'' can refer to a variety of forms of deviation, it is most often used to describe sexual behaviors that are c ...
category theorist might define a ring as a preadditive category with exactly
one 1 (one, unit, unity) is a number representing a single or the only entity. 1 is also a numerical digit and represents a single unit of counting or measurement. For example, a line segment of ''unit length'' is a line segment of length 1. I ...
object (in the same way that a monoid can be viewed as a category with only one object—and forgetting the additive structure of the ring gives us a monoid). In this way, preadditive categories can be seen as a generalisation of rings. Many concepts from ring theory, such as ideals, Jacobson radicals, and factor rings can be generalized in a straightforward manner to this setting. When attempting to write down these generalizations, one should think of the morphisms in the preadditive category as the "elements" of the "generalized ring".


Additive functors

If C and D are preadditive categories, then a functor F : C \rightarrow D is additive if it too is enriched over the category Ab. That is, F is additive if and only if, given any objects A and B of C, the function F:\text(A,B)\rightarrow \text(F(A),F(B)) is a group homomorphism. Most functors studied between preadditive categories are additive. For a simple example, if the rings R and S are represented by the one-object preadditive categories C_R and C_S, then a ring homomorphism from R to S is represented by an additive functor from C_R to C_S, and conversely. If C and D are categories and D is preadditive, then the functor category D^C is also preadditive, because natural transformations can be added in a natural way. If C is preadditive too, then the category \text(C,D) of additive functors and all natural transformations between them is also preadditive. The latter example leads to a generalization of modules over rings: If C is a preadditive category, then \text(C)\mathbin \text(C,Ab) is called the module category over C. When C is the one-object preadditive category corresponding to the ring R, this reduces to the ordinary category of (left) R-modules. Again, virtually all concepts from the theory of modules can be generalised to this setting.


-linear categories

More generally, one can consider a category enriched over the monoidal category of modules over a
commutative ring In mathematics, a commutative ring is a ring in which the multiplication operation is commutative. The study of commutative rings is called commutative algebra. Complementarily, noncommutative algebra is the study of ring properties that are not sp ...
, called an -linear category. In other words, each hom-set \text(A,B) in has the structure of an -module, and composition of morphisms is -bilinear. When considering functors between two -linear categories, one often restricts to those that are -linear, so those that induce -linear maps on each hom-set.


Biproducts

Any finite product in a preadditive category must also be a coproduct, and conversely. In fact, finite products and coproducts in preadditive categories can be characterised by the following ''biproduct condition'': :The object ''B'' is a biproduct of the objects ''A''1, ..., ''An'' if and only if there are ''projection morphisms'' ''p''''j'': ''B'' → ''A''''j'' and ''injection morphisms'' ''i''''j'': ''A''''j'' → ''B'', such that (''i''1∘''p''1) + ··· + (''in''∘''pn'') is the identity morphism of ''B'', ''pj''∘''ij'' is the identity morphism of Aj, and ''p''''j''∘''ik'' is the zero morphism from ''A''''k'' to ''Aj'' whenever ''j'' and ''k'' are distinct. This biproduct is often written ''A''1 ⊕ ··· ⊕ ''An'', borrowing the notation for the
direct sum The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently, but analogously, for different kinds of structures. To see how the direct sum is used in abstract algebra, consider a more ...
. This is because the biproduct in well known preadditive categories like Ab ''is'' the direct sum. However, although infinite direct sums make sense in some categories, like Ab, infinite biproducts do ''not'' make sense (see {{section link, Category of abelian groups#Properties). The biproduct condition in the case ''n'' = 0 simplifies drastically; ''B'' is a ''nullary biproduct'' if and only if the identity morphism of ''B'' is the zero morphism from ''B'' to itself, or equivalently if the hom-set Hom(''B'',''B'') is the trivial ring. Note that because a nullary biproduct will be both terminal (a nullary product) and initial (a nullary coproduct), it will in fact be a zero object. Indeed, the term "zero object" originated in the study of preadditive categories like Ab, where the zero object is the
zero group In mathematics, a trivial group or zero group is a group consisting of a single element. All such groups are isomorphic, so one often speaks of the trivial group. The single element of the trivial group is the identity element and so it is usually ...
. A preadditive category in which every biproduct exists (including a zero object) is called '' additive''. Further facts about biproducts that are mainly useful in the context of additive categories may be found under that subject.


Kernels and cokernels

Because the hom-sets in a preadditive category have zero morphisms, the notion of kernel and cokernel make sense. That is, if ''f'': ''A'' → ''B'' is a morphism in a preadditive category, then the kernel of ''f'' is the equaliser of ''f'' and the zero morphism from ''A'' to ''B'', while the cokernel of ''f'' is the
coequaliser In category theory, a coequalizer (or coequaliser) is a generalization of a quotient set, quotient by an equivalence relation to objects in an arbitrary category (mathematics), category. It is the categorical construction dual (category theory), ...
of ''f'' and this zero morphism. Unlike with products and coproducts, the kernel and cokernel of ''f'' are generally not equal in a preadditive category. When specializing to the preadditive categories of abelian groups or modules over a ring, this notion of kernel coincides with the ordinary notion of a kernel of a homomorphism, if one identifies the ordinary kernel ''K'' of ''f'': ''A'' → ''B'' with its embedding ''K'' → ''A''. However, in a general preadditive category there may exist morphisms without kernels and/or cokernels. There is a convenient relationship between the kernel and cokernel and the abelian group structure on the hom-sets. Given parallel morphisms ''f'' and ''g'', the equaliser of ''f'' and ''g'' is just the kernel of ''g'' − ''f'', if either exists, and the analogous fact is true for coequalisers. The alternative term "difference kernel" for binary equalisers derives from this fact. A preadditive category in which all biproducts, kernels, and cokernels exist is called '' pre-abelian''. Further facts about kernels and cokernels in preadditive categories that are mainly useful in the context of pre-abelian categories may be found under that subject.


Special cases

Most of these special cases of preadditive categories have all been mentioned above, but they're gathered here for reference. * A '' ring'' is a preadditive category with exactly one object. * An ''
additive category In mathematics, specifically in category theory, an additive category is a preadditive category C admitting all finitary biproducts. Definition A category C is preadditive if all its hom-sets are abelian groups and composition of m ...
'' is a preadditive category with all finite biproducts. * A ''
pre-abelian category In mathematics, specifically in category theory, a pre-abelian category is an additive category that has all kernels and cokernels. Spelled out in more detail, this means that a category C is pre-abelian if: # C is preadditive, that is enric ...
'' is an additive category with all kernels and cokernels. * An '' abelian category'' is a pre-abelian category such that every monomorphism and epimorphism is normal. The preadditive categories most commonly studied are in fact abelian categories; for example, Ab is an abelian category.


References

* Nicolae Popescu; 1973; Abelian Categories with Applications to Rings and Modules; Academic Press, Inc.; out of print * Charles Weibel; 1994; An introduction to homological algebras; Cambridge Univ. Press Additive categories