Zero morphism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In category theory, a zero morphism is a special kind of "trivial" morphism. Suppose C is a category, and for any two objects X and Y in C we are given a morphism 0XY : XY with the following property: for any two morphism f : RS and g : UV we obtain a commutative diagram:

Image:ZeroMorphism-01.png

Then the morphisms 0XY are called a family of zero morphisms in C.

By taking f or g to be the identity morphism in the diagram above, we see that the composition of any morphism with a zero morphism results in a zero morphism. Furthermore, if a category has a family of zero morphisms, then this family is unique.

If a category has zero morphisms, then one can define the notions of kernel and cokernel in that category.

A morphism is zero if and only if it is constant and coconstant.

[edit] Examples

0XY : X → 0 → Y
The family of all morphisms so constructed is a family of zero morphisms for C.
Languages