A strict factorization system is like an orthogonal factorization system, but the factorizations are specified uniquely on the nose, rather than merely up to isomorphism.
A strict factorization system on a category comprises wide subcategories and of such that every morphism in factors uniquely (not just uniquely up to unique isomorphism) as for and .
Note that a strict factorization system is not necessarily an orthogonal factorization system, since and may not contain the isomorphisms in . However, for every strict factorization system, there is a unique orthogonal factorization system containing it, given by closing under postcomposition by isomorphisms and closing under precomposition by isomorphisms (see §2.1 of Grandis (2000)).
Every category has two “trivial” strict factorization systems in which , respectively , consists of the identity morphisms only. The corresponding orthogonal factorization systems are those with one class consisting of the isomorphisms.
Part of the structure of a (non-generalized) Reedy category is a strict factorization system.
The category Set, as defined in a material set theory, has a strict factorization system consisting of the surjections and the inclusions of subsets. Its associated orthogonal factorization system consists of surjections and injections. Other categories built out of structured sets have similar strict factorization systems.
Each opfibration equipped with a splitting determines a strict factorisation system on whose classes of morphisms are the chosen opcartesian lifts and the vertical morphisms (those morphisms sent to identities by ).
Grandis, following Korostenski & Tholen, it is shown in detail how strict factorization systems are strict algebras for the 2-monad .
Such a 2-monad is induced by the comonoid structure of . Its unit sends an object to its identity map, while its multiplication sends a square in to its diagonal . The 2-monad is called by Grandis factorization monad.
Notably, every is equipped with a strict factorization system, given by top trivial and bottom trivial squares:
In fact, equipped with such strict fs is the free strict fs on . This can be formulated as follows:
The category with the aforementioned strict fs is universal in the following sense: for each other category equipped with a strict fs and functor , there is a functor , factoring through and that strictly preserves factorization systems.
Define to be the image of the factorization of .
The above also holds weakly for ortoghonal fss, so that now preserves the fs only up to unique functorial isomorphism.
We thus displayed as a universal arrow for , showcasing its nature as a left 2-adjoint to the forgetful functor . Grandis goes on to show this adjunction is in fact 2-monadic, exhibiting -algebras as strict factorization systems.
A strict algebra of is a category equipped with a functor such that and .
Let’s unpack the correspondence here.
The functor is easy to conceptualize: it sends a morphism to its image , this being the middle object in its (for now, only conjectural) factorization. Indeed, we can recover the desired strict factorization systems by looking at the image of the free factorization system on . Define a map in to be left () if it equals for some , and right () if it equals .
Now to show this pair is a strict fs we need to prove every morphism factors uniquely. By unitality , so that given in , there are left maps and right maps given by the image of the factorization of in . These maps must compose to , again by unitality, so -factorizations exists. Uniqueness follows by noticing implies .
Notice we didn’t use associativity, and in fact it can be proven from unitality alone. Let be an object in , i.e. a commutative square in . Then is the object obtained by factoring (corresponding to the horizontal factorization in the square below) while is the object obtained by factoring (corresponds to the diagonal factorization below):
The morphisms in the horizontal factorization can be precomposed with and postcomposed to get a different factorization of . By uniqueness, we must have .
A similar story holds for orthogonal factorization systems, which are equivalent to normal (i.e. strictly unital) pseudoalgebras of the factorization monad.
One reason strict factorization systems are of interest is that they can be identified with distributive laws in the bicategory of spans, as shown by Rosebrugh & Wood (2002).
Ordinary orthogonal factorization systems can be similarly characterized by:
using a type of relaxed distributive law, as in Rosebrugh & Wood (2002);
using wreaths as in Lack & Street (2002);
by working in the bicategory of profunctors instead, as in Lack (2004) (see also factorization system over a subcategory); or by
using weak distributive laws, as in Böhm (2012).
Strict factorization systems were defined in:
See also:
Robert Rosebrugh, Richard J. Wood, Distributive Laws and Factorization, Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra 175 1–3 (2002) 327-353 [doi:10.1016/S0022-4049(02)00140-8pdf]
Stephen Lack, Ross Street, The formal theory of monads II, J. Pure Appl. Alg. 175 1–3 (2002) 243-265 [doi:10.1016/S0022-4049(02)00137-8]
Stephen Lack, Composing PROPs, Theory and Applications of Categories, 13 9 (2004) 147-163 [tac:13-09]
Gabriella Böhm, Factorization systems induced by weak distributive laws, Appl. Categ. Structures 20 3 (2012) 275-302 [doi:10.1007/s10485-010-9243-y, arXiv:1009.0732]
Mareli Korostenski, Walter Tholen, Factorization systems as Eilenberg-Moore algebras, (doi)
Marco Grandis, On the monad of proper factorisation systems in categories, 2001, (doi, arxiv)
Last revised on July 4, 2024 at 15:09:22. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.