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In mathematics, particularly homological algebra, an exact functor is a functor that preserves short exact sequences. Exact functors are convenient for algebraic calculations because they can be directly applied to presentations of objects. Much of the work in homological algebra is designed to cope with functors that ''fail'' to be exact, but in ways that can still be controlled.


Definitions

Let P and Q be abelian categories, and let be a covariant
additive functor In mathematics, specifically in category theory, a preadditive category is another name for an Ab-category, i.e., a category that is enriched over the category of abelian groups, Ab. That is, an Ab-category C is a category such that every h ...
(so that, in particular, ''F''(0) = 0). We say that ''F'' is an exact functor if whenever :0 \to A\ \stackrel \ B\ \stackrel \ C \to 0 is a short exact sequence in P then :0 \to F(A) \ \stackrel \ F(B)\ \stackrel \ F(C) \to 0 is a short exact sequence in Q. (The maps are often omitted and implied, and one says: "if 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact, then 0→''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'')→0 is also exact".) Further, we say that ''F'' is *left-exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact then 0→''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'') is exact; *right-exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact then ''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'')→0 is exact; *half-exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact then ''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'') is exact. This is distinct from the notion of a
topological half-exact functor {{unreferenced, date=May 2014 In mathematics, a topological half-exact functor ''F'' is a functor from a fixed topological category (for example CW complexes or pointed spaces) to an abelian category (most frequently in applications, category of ab ...
. If ''G'' is a contravariant additive functor from P to Q, we similarly define ''G'' to be *exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact then 0→''G''(''C'')→''G''(''B'')→''G''(''A'')→0 is exact; *left-exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact then 0→''G''(''C'')→''G''(''B'')→''G''(''A'') is exact; *right-exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact then ''G''(''C'')→''G''(''B'')→''G''(''A'')→0 is exact; *half-exact if whenever 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 is exact then ''G''(''C'')→''G''(''B'')→''G''(''A'') is exact. It is not always necessary to start with an entire short exact sequence 0→''A''→''B''→''C''→0 to have some exactness preserved. The following definitions are equivalent to the ones given above: *''F'' is exact if and only if ''A''→''B''→''C'' exact implies ''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'') exact; *''F'' is left-exact if and only if 0→''A''→''B''→''C'' exact implies 0→''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'') exact (i.e. if "''F'' turns kernels into kernels"); *''F'' is right-exact if and only if ''A''→''B''→''C''→0 exact implies ''F''(''A'')→''F''(''B'')→''F''(''C'')→0 exact (i.e. if "''F'' turns cokernels into cokernels"); *''G'' is left-exact if and only if ''A''→''B''→''C''→0 exact implies 0→''G''(''C'')→''G''(''B'')→''G''(''A'') exact (i.e. if "''G'' turns cokernels into kernels"); *''G'' is right-exact if and only if 0→''A''→''B''→''C'' exact implies ''G''(''C'')→''G''(''B'')→''G''(''A'')→0 exact (i.e. if "''G'' turns kernels into cokernels").


Examples

Every equivalence or duality of abelian categories is exact. The most basic examples of left exact functors are the
Hom functor In mathematics, specifically in category theory, hom-sets (i.e. sets of morphisms between objects) give rise to important functors to the category of sets. These functors are called hom-functors and have numerous applications in category theory ...
s: if A is an abelian category and ''A'' is an object of A, then ''F''''A''(''X'') = HomA(''A'',''X'') defines a covariant left-exact functor from A to the category Ab of abelian groups. The functor ''F''''A'' is exact if and only if ''A'' is projective. The functor ''G''''A''(''X'') = HomA(''X'',''A'') is a contravariant left-exact functor; it is exact if and only if ''A'' is injective.Jacobson (2009), p. 156. If ''k'' is a
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and ''V'' is a vector space over ''k'', we write ''V'' * = Hom''k''(''V'',''k'') (this is commonly known as the dual space). 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 Module, modular and modularity may refer to the concept of modularity. They may also refer to: Computing and engineering * Modular design, the engineering discipline of designing complex devices using separately designed sub-components * Modul ...
. Alternatively, one can argue that every short exact sequence of ''k''-vector spaces
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, and any additive functor turns split sequences into split sequences.) If ''X'' is a
topological space In mathematics, a topological space is, roughly speaking, a geometrical space in which closeness is defined but cannot necessarily be measured by a numeric distance. More specifically, a topological space is a set whose elements are called po ...
, we can consider the abelian category of all sheaves of
abelian group In mathematics, an abelian group, also called a commutative group, is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written. That is, the group operation is comm ...
s on ''X''. The covariant functor that associates to each sheaf ''F'' the group of global sections ''F''(''X'') is left-exact. If ''R'' is a
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and ''T'' is a right ''R''-
module Module, modular and modularity may refer to the concept of modularity. They may also refer to: Computing and engineering * Modular design, the engineering discipline of designing complex devices using separately designed sub-components * Modul ...
, we can define a functor ''H''''T'' from the abelian category of all left ''R''-modules to Ab by using the tensor product over ''R'': ''H''''T''(''X'') = ''T'' ⊗ ''X''. This is a covariant right exact functor; it is exact if and only if ''T'' is flat. In other words, given an exact sequence ''A''→''B''→''C''→0 of left ''R'' modules, the sequence of abelian groups ''T'' ⊗ ''A'' → ''T'' ⊗ ''B'' → ''T'' ⊗ ''C'' → 0 is exact. For example, \mathbb is a flat \mathbb-module. Therefore, tensoring with \mathbb as a \mathbb-module is an exact functor. Proof: It suffices to show that if ''i'' is an injective map of \mathbb-modules i:M\to N, then the corresponding map between the tensor products M \otimes \mathbb \to N\otimes \mathbb is injective. One can show that m \otimes q = 0 if and only if m is a torsion element or q = 0. The given tensor products only have pure tensors. Therefore, it suffices to show that if a pure tensor m \otimes q is in the
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, then it is zero. Suppose that m \otimes q is an element of the kernel. Then, i(m) is torsion. Since i is injective, m is torsion. Therefore, m \otimes q = 0. Therefore, M \otimes \mathbb \to N\otimes \mathbb is also injective. In general, if ''T'' is not flat, then tensor product is not left exact. For example, consider the short exact sequence of \mathbf-modules 5\mathbf \hookrightarrow \mathbf \twoheadrightarrow \mathbf/5\mathbf. Tensoring over \mathbf with \mathbf/5\mathbf gives a sequence that is no longer exact, since \mathbf/5\mathbf is not torsion-free and thus not flat. If A is an abelian category and C is an arbitrary small
category Category, plural categories, may refer to: Philosophy and general uses *Categorization, categories in cognitive science, information science and generally *Category of being * ''Categories'' (Aristotle) *Category (Kant) *Categories (Peirce) *C ...
, we can consider the
functor category In category theory, a branch of mathematics, a functor category D^C is a category where the objects are the functors F: C \to D and the morphisms are natural transformations \eta: F \to G between the functors (here, G: C \to D is another object in ...
AC consisting of all functors from C to A; it is abelian. If ''X'' is a given object of C, then we get a functor ''E''''X'' from AC to A by evaluating functors at ''X''. This functor ''E''''X'' is exact. While tensoring may not be left exact, it can be shown that tensoring is a right exact functor: Theorem: Let ''A'',''B'',''C'' and ''P'' be ''R''-modules for a
commutative ring In mathematics, a commutative ring is a ring in which the multiplication operation is commutative. The study of commutative rings is called commutative algebra. Complementarily, noncommutative algebra is the study of ring properties that are not ...
''R'' having multiplicative identity. Let A \ \stackrel \ B\ \stackrel \ C \to 0 be a short exact sequence of ''R''-modules. Then :A\otimes_ P \stackrel\to B\otimes_ P \stackrel\to C \otimes_ P \to 0 is also a short exact sequence of ''R''-modules. (Since ''R'' is commutative, this sequence is a sequence of ''R''-modules and not merely of abelian groups). Here, we define :f \otimes P(a \otimes p):=f(a) \otimes p, g \otimes P(b \otimes p):=g(b) \otimes p. This has a useful
corollary In mathematics and logic, a corollary ( , ) is a theorem of less importance which can be readily deduced from a previous, more notable statement. A corollary could, for instance, be a proposition which is incidentally proved while proving another ...
: If ''I'' is an
ideal Ideal may refer to: Philosophy * Ideal (ethics), values that one actively pursues as goals * Platonic ideal, a philosophical idea of trueness of form, associated with Plato Mathematics * Ideal (ring theory), special subsets of a ring considered ...
of ''R'' and ''P'' is as above, then P \otimes_ (R/I) \cong P/IP. Proof: I \stackrel\to R \stackrel\to R/I \to 0, where ''f'' is the inclusion and ''g'' is the projection, is an exact sequence of ''R''-modules. By the above we get that :I\otimes_ P \stackrel\to R\otimes_ P \stackrel\to R/I \otimes_ P \to 0 is also a short exact sequence of ''R''-modules. By exactness, R/I \otimes_ P \cong (R\otimes_ P)/Image(f\otimes P) = (R\otimes_ P)/(I \otimes_ P), since ''f'' is the inclusion. Now, consider the ''R''-module homomorphism from R \otimes_R P \rightarrow P given by ''R''-linearly extending the map defined on pure tensors: r\otimes p \mapsto rp. rp=0 implies that 0= rp\otimes 1 = r \otimes p. So, the kernel of this map cannot contain any nonzero pure tensors. R \otimes_R P is composed only of pure tensors: For x_i \in R, \sum_ x_i (r_i \otimes p_i) = \sum_i 1 \otimes (r_i x_i p_i) = 1 \otimes (\sum_i r_i x_i p_i). So, this map is injective. It is clearly onto. So, R \otimes_R P \cong P. Similarly, I \otimes_R P \cong IP. This proves the corollary. As another application, we show that for, P =\mathbf /2= \, P \otimes \mathbf/m\mathbf \cong P/k\mathbfP where k=m/2^n and ''n'' is the highest
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dividing ''m''. We prove a special case: ''m''=12. Proof: Consider a pure tensor (12z)\otimes (a/2^k ) \in (12\mathbf \otimes_ P).(12z)\otimes (a/2^k ) = (3z)\otimes (a/2^) . Also, for (3z)\otimes (a/2^k ) \in (3\mathbf \otimes_ P), (3z)\otimes (a/2^k ) = (12z)\otimes (a/2^) . This shows that (12\mathbf \otimes_ P) = (3\mathbf \otimes_ P). Letting P= \mathbf /2 A = 12\mathbf, B= \mathbf, C = \mathbf/12\mathbf , ''A,B,C,P'' are ''R''=Z modules by the usual multiplication action and satisfy the conditions of the main theorem. By the exactness implied by the theorem and by the above note we obtain that : \mathbf/12\mathbf \otimes_ P \cong (\mathbf \otimes_ P) / (12\mathbf \otimes_ P) = (\mathbf \otimes_ P) / (3\mathbf \otimes_ P) \cong \mathbfP/3\mathbf P . The last congruence follows by a similar argument to one in the proof of the corollary showing that I \otimes_R P \cong IP .


Properties and theorems

A functor is exact if and only if it is both left exact and right exact. A covariant (not necessarily additive) functor is left exact if and only if it turns finite
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s into limits; a covariant functor is right exact if and only if it turns finite
colimit In category theory, a branch of mathematics, the abstract notion of a limit captures the essential properties of universal constructions such as products, pullbacks and inverse limits. The dual notion of a colimit generalizes constructions suc ...
s into colimits; a contravariant functor is left exact iff it turns finite colimits into limits; a contravariant functor is right exact iff it turns finite limits into colimits. 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.


Generalizations

In SGA4, tome I, section 1, the notion of left (right) exact functors are defined for general categories, and not just abelian ones. The definition is as follows: :Let ''C'' be a category with finite projective (resp. injective) limits. Then a functor from ''C'' to another category ''C′'' is left (resp. right) exact if it commutes with finite projective (resp. inductive) limits. Despite its abstraction, this general definition has 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''. The exact functors between Quillen's exact categories generalize the exact functors between abelian categories discussed here. The regular functors between regular categories are sometimes called exact functors and generalize the exact functors discussed here.


Notes


References

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Exact Functor Homological algebra Additive categories Functors