Opposite category
In category theory, a branch of mathematics, the opposite category or dual category Cop 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, .
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 ≤new by
- x ≤new y if and only if y ≤ x.
- For example, there are opposite pairs child/parent, or descendant/ancestor.
- The category of Boolean algebras and Boolean homomorphisms is equivalent to the opposite of the category of Stone spaces and continuous functions.
- The category of affine schemes is equivalent to the opposite of the category of commutative rings.
- The Pontryagin duality restricts to an equivalence between the category of compact Hausdorff abelian topological groups and the opposite of the category of (discrete) abelian groups.
- By the Gelfand-Neumark theorem, the category of localizable measurable spaces (with measurable maps) is equivalent to the category of commutative Von Neumann algebras (with normal unital homomorphisms of *-algebras).[1]
Properties
Opposite preserves products:
- (see product category)
Opposite preserves functors:
Opposite preserves slices:
- (see comma category)
See also
- Dual object
- Dual (category theory)
- Duality (mathematics)
- Adjoint functor
- Contravariant functor
- Opposite functor
References
- ↑ "Is there an introduction to probability theory from a structuralist/categorical perspective?". MathOverflow. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
- ↑ H. Herrlich, G. E. Strecker, Category Theory, 3rd Edition, Heldermann Verlag, ISBN 978-3-88538-001-6, p. 99.
- ↑ O. Wyler, Lecture Notes on Topoi and Quasitopoi, World Scientific, 1991, p. 8.
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