Exact functor

In homological algebra, an exact functor is a functor, from some category to another, which preserves exact sequences. Exact functors are very convenient in algebraic calculations, roughly speaking because they can be applied to presentations of objects easily. The whole subject of homological algebra is designed to cope with functors that fail to be exact, but in ways that can still be controlled.

Contents

Formal definitions

Formally, let P and Q be abelian categories, and let

F: PQ

be a functor.

Let

0ABC0

be a short exact sequence of objects in P.

If F is a covariant functor, we say that F is

If G is a contravariant functor from C to D, we can make a similar set of definitions. We say that G is

In fact, it is not always necessary to start with a short exact sequence 0ABC0 to have some exactness preserved. It is equivalent to say

Examples

The most important examples of left exact functors are the Hom functors: if A is an abelian category and A is an object of A, then FA(X) = HomA(A,X) defines a covariant left-exact functor from A to the category Ab of abelian groups.[1] The functor FA is exact if and only if A is projective.[2] The functor GA(X) = HomA(X,A) is a contravariant left-exact functor;[3] it is exact if and only if A is injective.[4]

If k is a field and V is a vector space over k, we write V* = Homk(V,k). This yields a contravariant exact functor from the category of k-vector spaces to itself. (Exactness follows from the above: k is an injective k-module. Alternatively, one can argue that every short exact sequence of k-vector spaces splits, and any additive functor turns split sequences into split sequences.)

If X is a topological space, we can consider the abelian category of all sheaves of abelian groups on X. The functor which associates to each sheaf F the group of global sections F(X) is left-exact.

If R is a ring and T is a right R-module, we can define a functor HT from the abelian category of all left R-modules to Ab by using the tensor product over R: HT(X) = TX. This is a covariant right exact functor; it is exact if and only if T is flat.

If A and B are two abelian categories, we can consider the functor category BA consisting of all functors from A to B. If A is a given object of A, then we get a functor EA from BA to B by evaluating functors at A. This functor EA is exact.

Note: In SGA4, tome I, section 1, the notion of left (right) exact functors have been defined for general categories, and not just abelian ones. The definition is as follows:

Let C be a category with finite projective (resp. inductive) limits. Then a functor u from C to another category C' is left (resp. right) exact if it commutes with projective (resp. inductive) limits.

Despite looking rather abstract, this general definition has a lot of useful consequences. For example in section 1.8, Grothendieck proves that a functor is pro-representable if and only if it is left exact. (Under some mild conditions on the category C).

Some facts

Every equivalence or duality of abelian categories is exact.

A covariant (not necessarily additive) functor is left exact if and only if it turns finite limits into limits; a covariant functor is right exact if and only if it turns finite colimits into colimits; a contravariant functor is left exact if and only if it turns finite colimits into limits; a contravariant functor is right exact if and only if it turns finite limits into colimits. A functor is exact if and only if it is both left exact and right exact.

The degree to which a left exact functor fails to be exact can be measured with its right derived functors; the degree to which a right exact functor fails to be exact can be measured with its left derived functors.

Left- and right exact functors are ubiquitous mainly because of the following fact: if the functor F is left adjoint to G, then F is right exact and G is left exact.

Notes

  1. ^ Jacobson (2009), p. 98, Theorem 3.1.
  2. ^ Jacobson (2009), p. 149, Prop. 3.9.
  3. ^ Jacobson (2009), p. 99, Theorem 3.1'.
  4. ^ Jacobson (2009), p. 156.

References