An involution is an endomorphism whose composition with itself is the identity morphism:
(involutions are equivalently -actions)
Involutions are equivalently the value on the single non-trivial element in of a group action by .
In this guise, involutions appear throughout representation theory, transformation groups, equivariant homotopy theory, equivariant cohomology, etc.
In particular, involutions, are the defining ingredients of Real (with capital “R”!) Whitehead-generalized cohomology theories such as KR-theory, MR-theory, BPR-theory and ER-theory.
(terminology in algebra)
An associative algebra equipped with an anti-involution is called a star-algebra.
On algebras and other mathematical structures where this makes sense, an anti-involution is an anti-homomorphism satisfying (1), instead of a homomorphism (hence an anti-endomorphism and necessarily an anti-automorphism).
(terminology in topology)
A topological space equipped with an involutive homeomorphism is sometimes called a real space (at least in the context of KR-theory).
In view of Rem. , involutions on topological spaces are equivalently known as topological G-spaces for . The case of n-spheres with involution is discussed here.
In dependent type theory, there are two different notions of involution.
A non-coherent involution on a type is an element of the type
A coherent involution on a type is an element of the type
Two involutions commute if and only if their composition is also an involution, as shown by the following manipulations:
In combinatorics, an important class of involutions are the fixed point free ones: an arbitrary involution on a finite set of cardinality may be specified by the choice of elements which are fixed together with a fixed point free involution on the remaining . The number of fixed point free involutions on a set of labelled elements is counted by the double factorial , while arbitrary involutions on a set of labelled elements are counted by OEIS sequence A000085, which also counts the number of Young tableaux with cells.
An involution on a set is the same thing as an action of on .
More generally, let be a monoidal category with distributive finite coproducts. The object is equipped with an involution
defined as the copairing of the right and left injections. Moreover, 2 can be given the structure of a monoid in , with unit and multiplication
defined by and (here we make use of the isomorphism to define by copairing). The mapping
thus extends to a monad on , sending any object to the free object equipped with an involution over . Explicitly, the unit and the multiplication of the monad are defined by tensoring the unit and the multiplication of the monoid with the identity on , while the involution on is likewise defined by tensoring the involution on 2 with the identity on .
We then have that involutions in are precisely the algebras of the monad . In the forward direction, given an involution , we define a monad algebra structure on by (again using the isomorphism ). Conversely, given a monad algebra , we can define an endomorphism by . The monad algebra laws imply that
and since is defined such that , we derive that is an involution.
Discussion in combinatorics:
Discussion in differential topology:
Last revised on August 21, 2024 at 02:12:38. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.