nLab lax monoidal category

Redirected from "skew-closed categories".
Contents

Context

Monoidal categories

monoidal categories

With braiding

With duals for objects

With duals for morphisms

With traces

Closed structure

Special sorts of products

Semisimplicity

Morphisms

Internal monoids

Examples

Theorems

In higher category theory

Contents

Idea

A lax monoidal category or skew monoidal category [Szlachányi 2012] is a monoidal category in which the associator- and unitor-transformations are not required to be invertible, i.e. are not required to be natural isomorphisms (as they are for ordinary monoidal categories).

In this case there needs to be made a choice in which direction these structure morphisms go. For the opposite of the “evident” direction one speaks of oplax monoidal categories.

Overview of variations

For ordinary monoidal categories, the biased and unbiased definitions coincide up to equivalence (though this is a nontrivial coherence theorem), but in the lax and oplax cases this is no longer true. Moreover, in the biased cases we can make independent choices of the directions of various of the morphisms. This yields the following variations (in all cases we omit the coherence axioms for now):

  • An unbiased lax monoidal category has nn-ary tensor products (a 1a n)(a_1\otimes \cdots\otimes a_n) for all n0n\ge 0, including a 0-ary unit I=()I = (), and generalized associativity maps such as

    ((abc)()(de))(abcde)((a\otimes b\otimes c) \otimes () \otimes (d\otimes e)) \to (a\otimes b\otimes c\otimes d\otimes e)

    and a unit map a(a)a\to (a). It is (strictly) normal if the later is an isomorphism (identity). It is a special case of a lax algebra for a 2-monad.

  • Dually, an unbiased oplax monoidal category has generalized associativity maps in the opposite direction

    (abcde)((abc)()(de))(a\otimes b\otimes c\otimes d\otimes e) \to ((a\otimes b\otimes c) \otimes () \otimes (d\otimes e))

    and a unit map (a)a(a) \to a. It is a special case of an oplax algebra for a 2-monad.

  • A left-biased lax monoidal category has a binary tensor product aba\otimes b, a unit II, and constraints

    (ab)ca(bc)IaaaIa(a\otimes b)\otimes c\to a \otimes (b\otimes c) \qquad I \otimes a\to a \qquad a\otimes I\to a
  • A right-biased lax monoidal category has a binary tensor product aba\otimes b, a unit II, and constraints

    a(bc)(ab)cIaaaIaa \otimes (b\otimes c) \to (a\otimes b)\otimes c \qquad I \otimes a\to a \qquad a\otimes I\to a
  • A left-biased oplax monoidal category has a binary tensor product aba\otimes b, a unit II, and constraints

    (ab)ca(bc)aIaaaI(a\otimes b)\otimes c\to a \otimes (b\otimes c) \qquad a\to I \otimes a \qquad a\to a\otimes I
  • A right-biased oplax monoidal category has a binary tensor product aba\otimes b, a unit II, and constraints

    a(bc)(ab)caIaaaIa \otimes (b\otimes c) \to (a\otimes b)\otimes c \qquad a\to I \otimes a \qquad a\to a\otimes I
  • A left-skew monoidal category has a binary tensor product aba\otimes b, a unit II, and constraints

    (ab)ca(bc)IaaaaI(a\otimes b)\otimes c\to a \otimes (b\otimes c) \qquad I \otimes a\to a \qquad a\to a\otimes I
  • A right-skew monoidal category has a binary tensor product aba\otimes b, a unit II, and constraints

    a(bc)(ab)caIaaIaa \otimes (b\otimes c) \to (a\otimes b)\otimes c \qquad a\to I \otimes a \qquad a\otimes I\to a

Terminologically, note that we use “right” and “left” to indicate the direction of the biased associator, while the direction of the unitors is indicated by “lax” or “oplax” (if they are in the same direction) or “skew” (if they are in different directions).

The relationship between these concepts is summarised in the following table.

If VV is a ___ monoidal category then…V revV^{rev} is…V opV^{op} is…V rev,opV^{rev,op} is…
left-biased laxright-biased laxright-biased oplaxleft-biased oplax
right-biased laxleft-biased laxleft-biased oplaxright-biased oplax
left-biased oplaxright-biased oplaxright-biased laxleft-biased lax
right-biased oplaxleft-biased oplaxleft-biased laxright-biased lax
left-skewright-skewright-skewleft-skew
right-skewleft-skewleft-skewright-skew

In other words, rev rev and op op always swap direction; whilst opop interchanges lax and oplax (and has no effect on skew-monoidal categories).

There are two other possibilities, in which the definitions of left-skew and right-skew monoidal category are modified so that the associator is reversed, but they seem not to have been studied.

This use of “lax” and “oplax” in the biased case is justified by the fact that biased (op)lax monoidal categories are a special case of unbiased ones, with the nn-ary tensor products defined in terms of the binary one by left- or right-associativity. The unbiased structures arising in this way can be characterized as those in which certain generalized associativities are identities (or, up to equivalence, isomorphisms).

Definitions

The above definitions are complete except for the coherence axioms. In the unbiased case these can be deduced from the general notion of lax algebra. In the biased cases, the axioms are roughly the same as those in MacLane’s original definition of monoidal category: one pentagon, three unit triangles, and one unit-unit axiom. (Kelly’s later reduction of these to one pentagon and one unit triangle relies on invertibility of the constraints.) In all cases it is possible to orient all of these axioms so as to make sense.

Normalisation

Theorem

(Lack and Street 2014, Theorem 8.1) The inclusion of right-normal left-skew monoidal categories (i.e. those for which the right unitor is invertible) and lax monoidal functors into left-skew monoidal categories admits a partial right pseudoadjoint, defined on those skew monoidal categories with reflexive coequalisers preserved by tensoring on the right, sending a skew monoidal category CC to the skew monoidal category C IC^I of II-modules.

Consequently, any skew monoidal category with such coequalisers may be replaced by a right-normal skew monoidal category with the same monoids.

First note that all kinds of lax monoidal categories can be generalized to lax monoids in a monoidal bicategory. Using this generalization, we can make connections to many other kinds of monoidal structures:

  • Oplax monoidal categories (i.e. oplax monoids in Cat) can be identified with multicategories that are “weakly representable”.

  • Multicategories themselves are precisely lax monoids in Span, and also normal lax monoids in Prof.

  • We obtain various kinds of lax promonoidal category by working in Prof instead of Cat.

  • In particular, non-unital closed categories can be defined as biased lax monoids in Prof whose multiplication is corepresentable in the first argument and whose left unitor is invertible. If the identity is also representable, we obtain a (unital) closed category. The identification of biased lax monoids with particular unbiased ones thereby specializes to the identification of closed categories with closed multicategories.

  • Just as the delooping of a monoidal category is a bicategory, so too is the delooping of a skew-monoidal category a skew-bicategory.

References

The definition of skew-monoidal category essentially appears in §2.2 of the following, but with only 2 of the 5 coherence axioms (i.e. Max Kelly‘s simplified axioms for monoidal categories, rather than Mac Lane’s original axioms):

The notion was later rediscovered in Theorem 4 of:

The definition was isolated in, and the terminology introduced in:

and the dual notion of skew-closed categories:

See also:

Examples of skew-closed monoidal structures on model categories which become monoidal on the homotopy category:

Skew monoidal closed structures on the category of Gray categories are considered in:

Lax monoidal categories are called multitensors in:

The biased d-lax 2-category in the following provide yet another kind of skew-monoidal category (in which the associator is the same as in a right-skew monoidal category, but the unitors as are in a left-skew monoidal category):

  • Marco Grandis, Lax 22 -categories and directed homotopy, Cahiers de topologie et géométrie différentielle catégoriques 47.2 (2006): 107-128.

Last revised on September 29, 2024 at 12:16:47. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.