symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
While a homomorphism of magmas (including groups, rings, etc) must preserve multiplication, an antihomomorphism must instead reverse multiplication.
Let and be magmas, or more generally magma objects in any symmetric monoidal category . (Examples include groups, which are magmas with extra properties; rings, which are magma objects in Ab with extra proprties; etc.)
An antihomomorphism from to is a homomorphism where is the opposite magma of , or equivalently, it is a function (or -morphism) such that:
Note that for magma objects in , the left-hand side of this equation is a generalised element of whose source is (where and are the sources of the generalised elements and and is the tensor product in ), while the right-hand side is a generalised element of whose source is . Therefore, this definition only makes unambiguous sense because is symmetric monoidal, using the unique natural isomorphism .
An antiautomorphism is an antihomomorphism whose underlying -morphism is an automorphism.
The inverse function of a group is a monoid anti-homomorphism, and in fact an anti-automorphism, hence an anti-involution, since , which means that .
The antipode in a Hopf algebra is an anti-homomorphism (by this Prop.). The same is separately required for antipodes on associative bialgebroids.
In a star-algebra the star-operation is an anti-homomorphism, in fact an anti-automorphism, hence an anti-involution.
Combining these two examples, in an involutive Hopf algebra the antipode is an anti-automorphism.
Last revised on May 26, 2022 at 20:52:22. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.