symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
With braiding
With duals for objects
category with duals (list of them)
dualizable object (what they have)
ribbon category, a.k.a. tortile category
With duals for morphisms
monoidal dagger-category?
With traces
Closed structure
Special sorts of products
Semisimplicity
Morphisms
Internal monoids
Examples
Theorems
In higher category theory
Definitions
Transfors between 2-categories
Morphisms in 2-categories
Structures in 2-categories
Limits in 2-categories
Structures on 2-categories
A monoidal monad is a monad in the 2-category of monoidal categories, lax monoidal functors, and monoidal transformations.
This notion originates inside the statement of Kock 1970, Thm. 3.2.
In components, this means (cf. Kock 1970, p. 8, review includes Seal 2012, §1.2):
acting on a monoidal category is:
such that the monad structure transformations and are monoidal transformations in that together with the lax monoidal structure and they make the following diagrams commute:
First of all, the lax monoidal unit must coincide with the monad unit
which already implies the unit diagram for the join operation:
and then the two main conditions:
and
Moreover, if is even a symmetric monoidal category with braiding , then a monoidal monad on as above is a symmetric monoidal monad if the underlying monoidal functor is a symmetric monoidal functor.
The notion of monoidal monad is equivalent to the notion of commutative monad. To put it another way: to give a commutative strength for a monad is to give a monoidal monad whose underlying monad is . We explore this connection below.
We discuss how monoidal monads functorially give rise to strong monads.
First to recall the notion of a strong monad:
Let be a monoidal category. We say a functor is strong if there are given left and right tensorial strengths, namely natural transformations of the form:
which are suitably compatible with one another: The full set of coherence conditions may be summarized by saying preserves the two-sided monoidal action of on itself, in an appropriate 2-categorical sense. More precisely: the two-sided action of on itself is a lax functor of 2-categories
where
Cat denotes the 2-category of categories, functors and natural transformations,
denotes the delooping one-object 2-category of the monoidal category ,
denotes its 1-cell dual, hence the same 2-category except with 1-morphism composition (here: tensor product) in reverse order),
the two-sided strength means we have a structure of lax natural transformation .
In the setting where is symmetric monoidal, we will assume that the left and right strengths and are related by the symmetry in the obvious way, by a commutative square
where the ‘s are instances of the symmetry isomorphism.
There is a category of strong functors , whose morphisms are natural transformations which are compatible with the strengths in the obvious sense. Under composition, this is a strict monoidal category.
The monoid objects in this monoidal category are called strong monads.
A strong monad (def. ) is a commutative monad if there is an equality of natural transformations where
is the composite
is the composite
(strength from monoidalness)
For a monoidal monad (Def. ), with the monoidal monad-structure on the underlying functor denoted by
Define strengths on both the left and the right by:
The strong monad structures obtained from monoidal monads via Def. are commutative monads (Def. ).
In fact, the two composites
are both equal to . We show this for the second composite; the proof is similar for the first. If denotes the monoidal constraint for and the constraint for the composite , then by definition is the composite given by
and so, using the properties of monoidal monads, we have a commutative diagram
which completes the proof.
This construction is functorial:
Given monoidal monads and on a monoidal category , a morphism of monads is a morphism of the induced strong monad structures (Def. ) if and only if it is a monoidal natural transformation.
(e.g. FPR (2019), Prop. C.5)
This relation has a converse:
For a monad on (the underlying category of) a monoidal category, there is a bijection between the structure on of:
and furthermore, in a symmetric monoidal category, under this equivalence, there is a logical equivalence between the properties of:
being a symmetric monoidal monad (def. ).
This is due to Kock (1972), Thm. 2.3), a detailed review is in GLLN08, §7.3, §A.4 and an Agda formalisation is in 1Lab.
Note that being a symmetric monoidal monad is a non-trivial property: see (McDermott & Uustalu 2022, appendix A.2) or math.SE.a/4877915 for an explicit example of a non-symmetric monoidal monad.
See here.
The Kleisli category of a monoidal monad on inherits the monoidal structure from . In particular, the tensor product is given
where is the monoidal multiplication of .
See examples of commutative monads.
The definition originally appears inside statement and proof of Thm. 3.2 in:
establishing right away the relation to commutative strong monads (in the case that the underlying monoidal category is symmetric monoidal closed) which is further expanded on in:
Anders Kock, Closed categories generated by commutative monads, Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society 12 4 (1971) 405-424 [doi:10.1017/S1446788700010272, pdf]
Anders Kock, Strong functors and monoidal monads, Arch. Math 23 (1972) 113–120 [doi:10.1007/BF01304852, pdf]
Further discussion:
H. Lindner, Commutative monads in: Deuxiéme colloque sur l’algébre des catégories Amiens-1975. Résumés des conférences, pages 283-288. Cahiers de topologie et géométrie différentielle catégoriques, tome 16, nr. 3 (1975) [numdam:CTGDC_1975__16_3_217_0, pdf]
William Keigher, Symmetric monoidal closed categories generated by commutative adjoint monads, Cahiers de Topologie et Géométrie Différentielle Catégoriques, 19 no. 3 (1978) 269-293 [numdam:CTGDC_1978__19_3_269_0, pdf]
Kosta Dosen, Zoran Petric, Coherence for Monoidal Monads and Comonads, Mathematical Structures in Computer Science , 20 4 (2010) 545-561 [arXiv:0907.2199, doi:10.1017/S0960129510000034]
Gavin J. Seal, Tensors, monads and actions, Theory and Applications of Categories 28 15 (2013) 403-434. [arXiv:1205.0101, tac:28-15]
(on the Eilenberg-Moore categories of monoidal monads)
Martin Brandenburg, Tensor categorical foundations of algebraic geometry (arXiv:1410.1716)
Dylan McDermott, Tarmo Uustalu, What Makes a Strong Monad?, EPTCS 360 (2022) 113-133 [arXiv:2207.00851, doi:10.4204/EPTCS.360.6]
Paolo Perrone, Starting Category Theory, World Scientific, 2024, Chapter 6. (website)
Formalisation in cubical Agda:
Discussion in the context of monads in computer science:
A statement in the above text is from
Last revised on July 8, 2024 at 11:06:15. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.