∞-ary regular and exact categories
arity class: unary, finitary, infinitary
regularity
regular category = unary regular
coherent category = finitary regular
geometric category = infinitary regular
exactness
exact category = unary exact
The notions of regular category, exact category, coherent category, extensive category, pretopos, and Grothendieck topos can be nicely unified in a theory of “familial regularity and exactness.” This was apparently first noticed in Street 1984, and expanded on by Shulman 2012 with a generalized theory of exact completion.
Let be a finitely complete category. By a sink in we mean a family of morphisms with common target. A sink is extremal epic if it doesn’t factor through any proper subobject of . The pullback of a sink along a morphism is defined in the evident way.
By a (many-object) relation in we will mean a family of objects together with, for every , a monic span (that is, a subobject of . We say such a relation is:
transitive if the pullback factors through , for all ,
symmetric if contains, hence is equal to, the transpose of for all , and
a congruence if it is reflexive, transitive, and symmetric; this is an internal notion of (many-object) equivalence relation.
Abstractly, reflexive and transitive relations can be identified with categories enriched in a suitable bicategory; see Street 1984. Congruences can be identified with enriched -categories.
A quotient for a relation is a colimit for the diagram consisting of all the and all the spans . And the kernel of a sink is the relation on with . It is evidently a congruence.
Finally, a sink is called effective-epic if it is the quotient of its kernel. It is called universally effective-epic if any pullback of it is effective-epic.
If , a congruence is the same as the ordinary internal notion of congruence. In this case quotients and kernels reduce to the usual notions.
If , a congruence contains no data and a sink is just an object in . The empty congruence is, trivially, the kernel of the empty sink with any target , and a quotient for the empty congruence is an initial object.
Given a family of objects , define a congruence by and (an initial object) if . Call a congruence of this sort trivial (empty congruences are always trivial). Then a quotient for a trivial congruence is a coproduct of the objects , and the kernel of a sink is trivial iff the are disjoint monomorphisms.
Let be an arity class. We call a sink or relation -ary if the cardinality is -small. As usual for arity classes, the cases of most interest have special names:
For a category , the following are equivalent:
has finite limits, every -ary sink in factors as an extremal epic sink followed by a monomorphism, and the pullback of any extremal epic -ary sink is extremal epic.
has finite limits, and the kernel of any -ary sink in is also the kernel of some universally effective-epic sink.
is a regular category and has pullback-stable joins of -small families of subobjects.
When these conditions hold, we say is -ary regular, or alternatively -ary coherent. There are also some other more technical characterizations; see Shulman 2012.
For a category , the following are equivalent:
has finite limits, and every -ary congruence is the kernel of some universally effective-epic sink.
is -ary regular, and every -ary congruence is the kernel of some sink.
When these conditions hold, we say that is called a -ary exact category, or alternatively a -ary pretopos.
A functor between -ary exact categories (Def. ) is called a -ary exact functor if it preserves finite limits and -small effective-epic (or equivalently extremal-epic) families.
(The 2-category of -ary exact categories)
The 2-category of -ary exact categories (Def. ), -ary exact functors (Def. ) and natural transformations is a reflective full sub-2-category of the 2-category of ∞-ary sites. The reflector is called exact completion.
Some other sorts of exactness properties (especially lex-colimits?) can also be characterized in terms of congruences, kernels, and quotients. For instance:
In Street, there is also a version of regularity and exactness that applies even to some large sinks and congruences, and implies some small-generation properties of the category as well.
In a -ary regular category,
Thus, in a -ary exact category,
In a -ary regular category, the class of all -small and effective-epic families generates a topology, called its -canonical topology. This topology makes it a ∞-ary site.
Ross Street, The family approach to total cocompleteness and toposes, Transactions of the AMS 284 no. 1, 1984. (doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-1984-0742429-3)
Michael Shulman, Exact completions and small sheaves, Theory and Applications of Categories, Vol. 27, 2012, No. 7, pp 97-173. (tac:27-07)
Last revised on October 17, 2021 at 13:54:10. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.