PlanetPhysics/Examples of Functor Categories
Introduction
Let us recall the essential data required to define [[../TrivialGroupoid/|functor categories]]. One requires two arbitrary [[../Cod/|categories]] that, in principle, could be large ones, and , and also the class (alternatively denoted as ) of all covariant [[../TrivialGroupoid/|functors]] from to . For any two such functors , and , the class of all [[../VariableCategory2/|natural transformations]] from to is denoted by , (or simply denoted by ). In the particular case when is a set one can still define for a [[../Cod/|small category]] , the set . Thus, (cf. p. 62 in [1]), when is a small category the class of natural transformations from to may be viewed as a subclass of the cartesian product , and because the latter is a set so is as well. Therefore, with the categorical law of [[../Cod/|composition]] of natural transformations of functors, and for being small, satisfies the conditions for the definition of a category, and it is in fact a functor category.
Examples
- Let us consider to be a small [[../AbelianCategory2/|abelian category]] and let be the category of finite Abelian (or commutative) [[../TrivialGroupoid/|groups]], as well as the set of all covariant functors from to . Then, one can show by following the steps defined in the definition of a functor category that , or thus defined is an Abelian functor category .
- Let be a small category of finite Abelian (or commutative) groups and, also let be a small category of group-groupoids, that is, group [[../TrivialGroupoid/|objects]] in the [[../GroupoidCategory/|category of groupoids]]. Then, one can show that the imbedding functors : from into form a functor category .
- In the general case when is not small, the proper class may be endowed with the structure of a [[../SuperCategory6/|supercategory]] defined as any formal interpretation of [[../ETACAxioms/|ETAS]] with the usual categorical [[../Identity2/|composition law]] for natural transformations of functors; similarly, one can construct a meta-category called the supercategory of all functor categories .