Unitary Morphism
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In
category theory Category theory is a general theory of mathematical structures and their relations. It was introduced by Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane in the middle of the 20th century in their foundational work on algebraic topology. Category theory ...
, a branch of
mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, a dagger category (also called involutive category or category with involution) is a
category Category, plural categories, may refer to: General uses *Classification, the general act of allocating things to classes/categories Philosophy * Category of being * ''Categories'' (Aristotle) * Category (Kant) * Categories (Peirce) * Category ( ...
equipped with a certain structure called ''dagger'' or ''involution''. The name dagger category was coined by Peter Selinger.


Formal definition

A dagger category is a category \mathcal equipped with an involutive contravariant endofunctor \dagger which is the identity on objects. In detail, this means that: * for all
morphism In mathematics, a morphism is a concept of category theory that generalizes structure-preserving maps such as homomorphism between algebraic structures, functions from a set to another set, and continuous functions between topological spaces. Al ...
s f: A \to B, there exists its adjoint f^\dagger: B \to A * for all morphisms f, (f^\dagger)^\dagger = f * for all objects A, \mathrm_A^\dagger = \mathrm_A * for all f: A \to B and g: B \to C, (g \circ f)^\dagger = f^\dagger \circ g^\dagger: C \to A Note that in the previous definition, the term "adjoint" is used in a way analogous to (and inspired by) the linear-algebraic sense, not in the category-theoretic sense. Some sources define a category with involution to be a dagger category with the additional property that its
set Set, The Set, SET or SETS may refer to: Science, technology, and mathematics Mathematics *Set (mathematics), a collection of elements *Category of sets, the category whose objects and morphisms are sets and total functions, respectively Electro ...
of morphisms is partially ordered and that the order of morphisms is compatible with the composition of morphisms, that is a < b implies a\circ c for morphisms a, b, c whenever their sources and targets are compatible.


Examples

* The category Rel of sets and relations possesses a dagger structure: for a given
relation Relation or relations may refer to: General uses * International relations, the study of interconnection of politics, economics, and law on a global level * Interpersonal relationship, association or acquaintance between two or more people * ...
R:X \rightarrow Y in Rel, the relation R^\dagger:Y \rightarrow X is the relational converse of R. In this example, a self-adjoint morphism is a
symmetric relation A symmetric relation is a type of binary relation. Formally, a binary relation ''R'' over a set ''X'' is symmetric if: : \forall a, b \in X(a R b \Leftrightarrow b R a) , where the notation ''aRb'' means that . An example is the relation "is equ ...
. * The category Cob of cobordisms is a
dagger compact category In category theory, a branch of mathematics, dagger compact categories (or dagger compact closed categories) first appeared in 1989 in the work of Sergio Doplicher and John E. Roberts on the reconstruction of compact topological groups from thei ...
, in particular it possesses a dagger structure. * The category Hilb of
Hilbert space In mathematics, a Hilbert space is a real number, real or complex number, complex inner product space that is also a complete metric space with respect to the metric induced by the inner product. It generalizes the notion of Euclidean space. The ...
s also possesses a dagger structure: Given a bounded linear map f:A \rightarrow B, the map f^\dagger:B \rightarrow A is just its adjoint in the usual sense. * Any monoid with involution is a dagger category with only one object. In fact, every
endomorphism In mathematics, an endomorphism is a morphism from a mathematical object to itself. An endomorphism that is also an isomorphism is an automorphism. For example, an endomorphism of a vector space is a linear map , and an endomorphism of a g ...
hom-set In mathematics, a morphism is a concept of category theory that generalizes structure-preserving maps such as homomorphism between algebraic structures, functions from a set to another set, and continuous functions between topological spaces. Alt ...
in a dagger category is not simply a
monoid In abstract algebra, a monoid is a set equipped with an associative binary operation and an identity element. For example, the nonnegative integers with addition form a monoid, the identity element being . Monoids are semigroups with identity ...
, but a monoid with involution, because of the dagger. * A
discrete category In mathematics, in the field of category theory, a discrete category is a category whose only morphisms are the identity morphisms: :hom''C''(''X'', ''X'') = {id''X''} for all objects ''X'' :hom''C''(''X'', ''Y'') = ∅ for all objects ''X'' ≠ '' ...
is trivially a dagger category. * A
groupoid In mathematics, especially in category theory and homotopy theory, a groupoid (less often Brandt groupoid or virtual group) generalises the notion of group in several equivalent ways. A groupoid can be seen as a: * '' Group'' with a partial fu ...
(and as trivial corollary, a
group A group is a number of persons or things that are located, gathered, or classed together. Groups of people * Cultural group, a group whose members share the same cultural identity * Ethnic group, a group whose members share the same ethnic iden ...
) also has a dagger structure with the adjoint of a morphism being its inverse. In this case, all morphisms are unitary (definition below).


Remarkable morphisms

In a dagger category \mathcal, a morphism f is called * unitary if f^\dagger = f^, * self-adjoint if f^\dagger = f. The latter is only possible for an
endomorphism In mathematics, an endomorphism is a morphism from a mathematical object to itself. An endomorphism that is also an isomorphism is an automorphism. For example, an endomorphism of a vector space is a linear map , and an endomorphism of a g ...
f\colon A \to A. The terms ''unitary'' and ''self-adjoint'' in the previous definition are taken from the category of Hilbert spaces, where the morphisms satisfying those properties are then
unitary Unitary may refer to: Mathematics * Unitary divisor * Unitary element * Unitary group * Unitary matrix * Unitary morphism * Unitary operator * Unitary transformation * Unitary representation * Unitarity (physics) * ''E''-unitary inverse semigr ...
and
self-adjoint In mathematics, an element of a *-algebra is called self-adjoint if it is the same as its adjoint (i.e. a = a^*). Definition Let \mathcal be a *-algebra. An element a \in \mathcal is called self-adjoint if The set of self-adjoint elements ...
in the usual sense.


See also

* *-algebra * Dagger symmetric monoidal category *
Dagger compact category In category theory, a branch of mathematics, dagger compact categories (or dagger compact closed categories) first appeared in 1989 in the work of Sergio Doplicher and John E. Roberts on the reconstruction of compact topological groups from thei ...


References

P. Selinger,
Dagger compact closed categories and completely positive maps
', Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on Quantum Programming Languages, Chicago, June 30–July 1, 2005.
M. Burgin, ''Categories with involution and correspondences in γ-categories'', IX All-Union Algebraic Colloquium, Gomel (1968), pp.34–35; M. Burgin, ''Categories with involution and relations in γ-categories'', Transactions of the Moscow Mathematical Society, 1970, v. 22, pp. 161–228 J. Lambek, ''Diagram chasing in ordered categories with involution'', Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra 143 (1999), No.1–3, 293–307
*{{nlab, id=dagger-category, title=Dagger category