Accessible category

The theory of accessible categories originates from the work of Grothendieck completed by 1969 (Grothendieck (1972)) and Gabriel–Ulmer (1971). It has been further developed in 1989 by Michael Makkai and Robert Paré, with motivation coming from model theory, a branch of mathematical logic.[1] Accessible categories also have applications in homotopy theory.[1][2] Grothendieck also continued the development of the theory for homotopy-theoretic purposes in his (still partly unpublished) 1991 manuscript Les dérivateurs (Grothendieck (1991)). Some properties of accessible categories depend on the set universe in use, particularly on the cardinal properties.[3]

Definition

Let be an infinite regular cardinal and let be a category. An object of is called -presentable if the Hom functor preserves -directed colimits. The category is called -accessible provided that :

A category is called accessible if is -accessible for some infinite regular cardinal .

A -presentable object is usually called finitely presentable, and an -accessible category is often called finitely accessible.

Examples

Further notions

When an accessible category is also cocomplete, is called locally presentable. Locally presentable categories are also complete.

References

  1. 1 2 J. Rosický "On combinatorial model categories", arXiv, 16 August 2007. Retrieved on 19 January 2008.
  2. J. Rosický, Injectivity and accessible categories
  3. J. Adamek and J. Rosický, Locally Presentable and Accessible Categories, Cambridge University Press 1994

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.