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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, categorification is the process of replacing set-theoretic theorems with category-theoretic analogues. Categorification, when done successfully, replaces sets with categories, functions with functors, and
equation In mathematics, an equation is a formula that expresses the equality of two expressions, by connecting them with the equals sign . The word ''equation'' and its cognates in other languages may have subtly different meanings; for example, in ...
s with natural isomorphisms of functors satisfying additional properties. The term was coined by Louis Crane. The reverse of categorification is the process of ''decategorification''. Decategorification is a systematic process by which
isomorphic In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between them. The word is ...
objects in a category are identified as
equal Equal(s) may refer to: Mathematics * Equality (mathematics). * Equals sign (=), a mathematical symbol used to indicate equality. Arts and entertainment * ''Equals'' (film), a 2015 American science fiction film * ''Equals'' (game), a board game ...
. Whereas decategorification is a straightforward process, categorification is usually much less straightforward. In the representation theory of
Lie algebra In mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a vector space \mathfrak g together with an Binary operation, operation called the Lie bracket, an Alternating multilinear map, alternating bilinear map \mathfrak g \times \mathfrak g \rightarrow ...
s, modules over specific algebras are the principal objects of study, and there are several frameworks for what a categorification of such a module should be, e.g., so called (weak) abelian categorifications. Categorification and decategorification are not precise mathematical procedures, but rather a class of possible analogues. They are used in a similar way to the words like ' generalization', and not like '
sheafification In mathematics, the gluing axiom is introduced to define what a sheaf \mathcal F on a topological space X must satisfy, given that it is a presheaf, which is by definition a contravariant functor ::(X) \rightarrow C to a category C which initiall ...
'.


Examples

One form of categorification takes a structure described in terms of sets, and interprets the sets as ''isomorphism classes'' of objects in a category. For example, the set of
natural numbers In mathematics, the natural numbers are those numbers used for counting (as in "there are ''six'' coins on the table") and ordering (as in "this is the ''third'' largest city in the country"). Numbers used for counting are called ''cardinal n ...
can be seen as the set of ''cardinalities'' of finite sets (and any two sets with the same cardinality are isomorphic). In this case, operations on the set of natural numbers, such as addition and multiplication, can be seen as carrying information about products and
coproducts In category theory, the coproduct, or categorical sum, is a construction which includes as examples the disjoint union of sets and of topological spaces, the free product of groups, and the direct sum of modules and vector spaces. The coproduc ...
of the
category of finite sets In the mathematical field of category theory, FinSet is the category whose objects are all finite sets and whose morphisms are all functions between them. FinOrd is the category whose objects are all finite ordinal numbers and whose morphisms are a ...
. Less abstractly, the idea here is that manipulating sets of actual objects, and taking coproducts (combining two sets in a union) or products (building arrays of things to keep track of large numbers of them) came first. Later, the concrete structure of sets was abstracted away – taken "only up to isomorphism", to produce the abstract theory of arithmetic. This is a "decategorification" – categorification reverses this step. Other examples include
homology theories In mathematics, homology is a general way of associating a sequence of algebraic objects, such as abelian groups or modules, with other mathematical objects such as topological spaces. Homology groups were originally defined in algebraic topolog ...
in topology. Emmy Noether gave the modern formulation of homology as the rank of certain free abelian groups by categorifying the notion of a Betti number. See also
Khovanov homology In mathematics, Khovanov homology is an oriented link invariant that arises as the cohomology of a cochain complex. It may be regarded as a categorification of the Jones polynomial. It was developed in the late 1990s by Mikhail Khovanov, then at ...
as a knot invariant in
knot theory In the mathematical field of topology, knot theory is the study of knot (mathematics), mathematical knots. While inspired by knots which appear in daily life, such as those in shoelaces and rope, a mathematical knot differs in that the ends are ...
. An example in finite group theory is that the ring of symmetric functions is categorified by the category of representations of the symmetric group. The decategorification map sends the Specht module indexed by partition \lambda to the Schur function indexed by the same partition, :S^\lambda \stackrel s_\lambda, essentially following the
character Character or Characters may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Literature * ''Character'' (novel), a 1936 Dutch novel by Ferdinand Bordewijk * ''Characters'' (Theophrastus), a classical Greek set of character sketches attributed to The ...
map from a favorite basis of the associated
Grothendieck group In mathematics, the Grothendieck group, or group of differences, of a commutative monoid is a certain abelian group. This abelian group is constructed from in the most universal way, in the sense that any abelian group containing a homomorphic i ...
to a representation-theoretic favorite basis of the ring of symmetric functions. This map reflects how the structures are similar; for example :\left operatorname_^(S^ \otimes S^)\right\qquad \text \qquad s_\mu s_\nu have the same decomposition numbers over their respective bases, both given by Littlewood–Richardson coefficients.


Abelian categorifications

For a category \mathcal, let K(\mathcal) be the
Grothendieck group In mathematics, the Grothendieck group, or group of differences, of a commutative monoid is a certain abelian group. This abelian group is constructed from in the most universal way, in the sense that any abelian group containing a homomorphic i ...
of \mathcal. Let A be a ring which is free as an abelian group, and let \mathbf = \_ be a basis of A such that the multiplication is positive in \mathbf, i.e. :a_i a_j = \sum_ c_^k a_k, with c_^k \in \mathbb_. Let B be an A- module. Then a (weak) abelian categorification of (A, \mathbf, B) consists of an abelian category \mathcal, an isomorphism \phi: K(\mathcal) \to B, and exact endofunctors F_i: \mathcal \to \mathcal such that # the functor F_i lifts the action of a_i on the module B, i.e. \phi _i= a_i \phi, and # there are isomorphisms F_i F_j \cong \bigoplus_ F_k^,, i.e. the composition F_i F_j decomposes as the direct sum of functors F_k in the same way that the product a_i a_j decomposes as the linear combination of basis elements a_k.


See also

* Combinatorial proof, the process of replacing
number theoretic Number theory (or arithmetic or higher arithmetic in older usage) is a branch of pure mathematics devoted primarily to the study of the integers and integer-valued functions. German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855) said, "Math ...
theorems by set-theoretic analogues. * Higher category theory * Higher-dimensional algebra * Categorical ring


References

* * * * *


Further reading

* A blog post by one of the above authors (Baez): https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2008/10/what_is_categorification.html. {{Category theory Category theory Algebraic topology