In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, the derived category ''D''(''A'') of an
abelian category ''A'' is a construction of
homological algebra introduced to refine and in a certain sense to simplify the theory of
derived functors defined on ''A''. The construction proceeds on the basis that the
objects of ''D''(''A'') should be
chain complexes in ''A'', with two such chain complexes considered
isomorphic when there is a
chain map that induces an isomorphism on the level of
homology of the chain complexes. Derived functors can then be defined for chain complexes, refining the concept of
hypercohomology. The definitions lead to a significant simplification of formulas otherwise described (not completely faithfully) by complicated
spectral sequences.
The development of the derived category, by
Alexander Grothendieck and his student
Jean-Louis Verdier shortly after 1960, now appears as one terminal point in the explosive development of homological algebra in the 1950s, a decade in which it had made remarkable strides. The basic theory of Verdier was written down in his dissertation, published finally in 1996 in
Astérisque (a summary had earlier appeared in
SGA 4½). The axiomatics required an innovation, the concept of
triangulated category, and the construction is based on
localization of a category, a generalization of
localization of a ring. The original impulse to develop the "derived" formalism came from the need to find a suitable formulation of Grothendieck's
coherent duality theory. Derived categories have since become indispensable also outside of
algebraic geometry
Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics which uses abstract algebraic techniques, mainly from commutative algebra, to solve geometry, geometrical problems. Classically, it studies zero of a function, zeros of multivariate polynomials; th ...
, for example in the formulation of the theory of
D-modules and
microlocal analysis. Recently derived categories have also become important in areas nearer to physics, such as
D-branes and
mirror symmetry.
Unbounded derived categories were introduced by Spaltenstein in 1988.
Motivations
In
coherent sheaf theory, pushing to the limit of what could be done with
Serre duality without the assumption of a
non-singular scheme, the need to take a whole complex of sheaves in place of a single ''dualizing sheaf'' became apparent. In fact the
Cohen–Macaulay ring condition, a weakening of non-singularity, corresponds to the existence of a single dualizing sheaf; and this is far from the general case. From the top-down intellectual position, always assumed by Grothendieck, this signified a need to reformulate. With it came the idea that the 'real'
tensor product and ''Hom'' functors would be those existing on the derived level; with respect to those,
Tor and
Ext become more like computational devices.
Despite the level of abstraction, derived categories became accepted over the following decades, especially as a convenient setting for
sheaf cohomology. Perhaps the biggest advance was the formulation of the
Riemann–Hilbert correspondence in dimensions greater than 1 in derived terms, around 1980. The
Sato school adopted the language of derived categories, and the subsequent history of
D-modules was of a theory expressed in those terms.
A parallel development was the category of
spectra in
homotopy theory. The homotopy category of spectra and the derived category of a ring are both examples of
triangulated categories.
Definition
Let
be an
abelian category. (Examples include the category of
modules over a
ring and the category of
sheaves of abelian groups on a topological space.) The derived category
is defined by a universal property with respect to the category
of
cochain complexes with terms in
. The objects of
are of the form
:
where each ''X''
''i'' is an object of
and each of the composites
is zero. The ''i''th cohomology group of the complex is
. If
and
are two objects in this category, then a morphism
is defined to be a family of morphisms
such that
. Such a morphism induces morphisms on cohomology groups
, and
is called a quasi-isomorphism if each of these morphisms is an isomorphism in
.
The universal property of the derived category is that it is a
localization of the category of complexes with respect to quasi-isomorphisms. Specifically, the derived category
is a category, together with a functor
, having the following universal property: Suppose
is another category (not necessarily abelian) and
is a functor such that, whenever
is a quasi-isomorphism in
, its image
is an isomorphism in
; then
factors through
. Any two categories having this universal property are equivalent.
Relation to the homotopy category
If
and
are two morphisms
in
, then a chain homotopy or simply homotopy
is a collection of morphisms
such that
for every ''i''. It is straightforward to show that two homotopic morphisms induce identical morphisms on cohomology groups. We say that
is a chain homotopy equivalence if there exists
such that
and
are chain homotopic to the identity morphisms on
and
, respectively. The
homotopy category of cochain complexes is the category with the same objects as
but whose morphisms are equivalence classes of morphisms of complexes with respect to the relation of chain homotopy. There is a natural functor
which is the identity on objects and which sends each morphism to its chain homotopy equivalence class. Since every chain homotopy equivalence is a quasi-isomorphism,
factors through this functor. Consequently
can be equally well viewed as a localization of the homotopy category.
From the point of view of
model categories, the derived category ''D''(''A'') is the true 'homotopy category' of the category of complexes, whereas ''K''(''A'') might be called the 'naive homotopy category'.
Constructing the derived category
There are several possible constructions of the derived category. When
is a small category, then there is a direct construction of the derived category by formally adjoining inverses of quasi-isomorphisms. This is an instance of the general construction of a category by generators and relations.
When
is a large category, this construction does not work for set theoretic reasons. This construction builds morphisms as equivalence classes of paths. If
has a proper class of objects, all of which are isomorphic, then there is a proper class of paths between any two of these objects. The generators and relations construction therefore only guarantees that the morphisms between two objects form a proper class. However, the morphisms between two objects in a category are usually required to be sets, and so this construction fails to produce an actual category.
Even when
is small, however, the construction by generators and relations generally results in a category whose structure is opaque, where morphisms are arbitrarily long paths subject to a mysterious equivalence relation. For this reason, it is conventional to construct the derived category more concretely even when set theory is not at issue.
These other constructions go through the homotopy category. The collection of quasi-isomorphisms in
forms a multiplicative system. This is a collection of conditions that allow complicated paths to be rewritten as simpler ones. The Gabriel–Zisman theorem implies that localization at a multiplicative system has a simple description in terms of roofs. A morphism
in
may be described as a pair
, where for some complex
,
is a quasi-isomorphism and
is a chain homotopy equivalence class of morphisms. Conceptually, this represents
. Two roofs are equivalent if they have a common overroof.
Replacing chains of morphisms with roofs also enables the resolution of the set-theoretic issues involved in derived categories of large categories. Fix a complex
and consider the category
whose objects are quasi-isomorphisms in
with codomain
and whose morphisms are commutative diagrams. Equivalently, this is the category of objects over
whose structure maps are quasi-isomorphisms. Then the multiplicative system condition implies that the morphisms in
from
to
are
:
assuming that this
colimit is in fact a set. While
is potentially a large category, in some cases it is controlled by a small category. This is the case, for example, if
is a Grothendieck abelian category (meaning that it satisfies AB5 and has a set of generators), with the essential point being that only objects of bounded cardinality are relevant. In these cases, the limit may be calculated over a small subcategory, and this ensures that the result is a set. Then
may be defined to have these sets as its
sets.
There is a different approach based on replacing morphisms in the derived category by morphisms in the homotopy category. A morphism in the derived category with codomain being a bounded below complex of injective objects is the same as a morphism to this complex in the homotopy category; this follows from termwise injectivity. By replacing termwise injectivity by a stronger condition, one gets a similar property that applies even to unbounded complexes. A complex
is ''K''-injective if, for every acyclic complex
, we have
. A straightforward consequence of this is that, for every complex
, morphisms
in
are the same as such morphisms in
. A theorem of Serpé, generalizing work of Grothendieck and of Spaltenstein, asserts that in a Grothendieck abelian category, every complex is quasi-isomorphic to a K-injective complex with injective terms, and moreover, this is functorial. In particular, we may define morphisms in the derived category by passing to K-injective resolutions and computing morphisms in the homotopy category. The functoriality of Serpé's construction ensures that composition of morphisms is well-defined. Like the construction using roofs, this construction also ensures suitable set theoretic properties for the derived category, this time because these properties are already satisfied by the homotopy category.
Derived Hom-sets
As noted before, in the derived category the hom sets are expressed through roofs, or valleys
, where
is a quasi-isomorphism. To get a better picture of what elements look like, consider an exact sequence
:
We can use this to construct a morphism