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Closed monoidal category

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A category $\mathcal{C}$ is monoidal if it consists of the following data:

1) a category $\mathcal{C}$;

2) a bifunctor $\otimes : \mathcal{C}\times\mathcal{C}\rightarrow\mathcal{C}$;

3) an object $e\in\mathcal{C}$; and

4) three natural isomorphisms $\alpha,\lambda,\rho$ such that

A1) $\alpha_{a,b,c} : a \otimes (b \otimes c) \cong (a \otimes b) \otimes c$ is natural for all $a,b,c \in \mathcal{C}$ and the diagram $$ \begin{array}{ccccc} a \otimes (b \otimes (c \otimes d)) & \stackrel{\alpha}{\rightarrow} & (a \otimes b) \otimes (c \otimes d) & \stackrel{\alpha}{\rightarrow} & ((a \otimes b) \otimes c) \otimes d \\ \downarrow\mathrm{id}\otimes\alpha & & & & \uparrow \alpha\otimes\mathrm{id} \\ a \otimes ((b \otimes c) \otimes d) & & \stackrel{\alpha}{\rightarrow} & & (a \otimes (b \otimes c)) \otimes d \end{array} $$ commutes for all $a,b,c,d \in \mathcal{C}$;

A2) $\lambda$ and $\rho$ are natural and $\lambda : e \otimes a \cong a$, $\rho : a \otimes e \cong a$ for all objects $a \in \mathcal{C}$ and the diagram $$ \begin{array}{ccc} a \otimes (e \otimes c) & \stackrel{\alpha}{\rightarrow} & (a \otimes e) \otimes c \\ \downarrow\mathrm{id}\otimes\lambda & & \downarrow\rho\otimes\mathrm{id} \\ a \otimes c & = & a \otimes c \end{array} $$ commutes for all $a.c \in \mathcal{C}$;

A3) $\lambda_e = \rho_e : e \otimes e \rightarrow e$.

These axioms imply that all such diagrams commute.

Some examples of monoidal categories are:

E1) any category with finite products is monoidal if one takes $a\otimes b$ to be the (chosen) product of the objects $a$ and $b$, with $e$ the terminal object; $\alpha,\lambda,\rho$ are the unique isomorphisms that commute with the appropriate projections;

E2) the usual "tensor products" give monoidal categories — whence the notation. Note that one cannot identify all isomorphic objects in $\mathcal{C}$.

Closed categories.

A monoidal category is said to be symmetric if it comes with isomorphisms : natural on such that the following diagrams all commute:

, : :

A closed category is a symmetric monoidal category in which each functor has a specified right-adjoint .

Some examples of closed monoidal categories are:

E3) the category of relations, whose objects are sets and in which an arrow is a subset ; the object is the Cartesian product of the two sets, which is not the product in this category;

E4) the subsets of a monoid (a poset, hence a category); if , are two subsets of , then is while is .

References

[a1] M. Barr, C. Wells, "Category theory for computing science" , CRM (1990)
[a2] S. MacLane, "Categories for the working mathematician" , Springer (1971)
How to Cite This Entry:
Closed monoidal category. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Closed_monoidal_category&oldid=42386
This article was adapted from an original article by Michel Eytan (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article