Morita theorem for hereditary Calabi-Yau categories (Q2065941)
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English | Morita theorem for hereditary Calabi-Yau categories |
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Morita theorem for hereditary Calabi-Yau categories (English)
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13 January 2022
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The paper characterizes the structure of Calabi-Yau triangulated category with a hereditary cluster tilting object. Recall that a triangulated category \(\mathcal T\) is \(d\)-Calabi-Yau if it has finite dimensional morphism spaces over a field \(k\), and satisfies the functorial isomorphism \(\mathcal T(A,B)\cong \Hom_k(\mathcal T(B,A[d]),k)\) for all \(A,B\in \mathcal T\). An example of \(d\)-Calabi-Yau category is the \(d\)-cluster category of a hereditary algebra \(H\), which is the orbit category of derived category \(D^b(H)\) under the functor \(\tau^{-1}[d-1]\). The cluster category has a \(d\)-cluster tilting object. Morita theory suggests that module categories of two rings are equivalent if and only there exists progengentors inducing the equivalence. The author proves a version of Morita theory for Calabi-Yau categories. The \(d\)-cluster tilting objects play the role of progenerators. More precisely, an algebraic \(d\)-Calabi-Yau category with a hereditary \(n\)-cluster tilting object \(T\) is equivalent the \(d\)-cluster category of the hereditary endomorphism algebra of \(T\oplus T[-1]\oplus \dots\oplus T[2-d]\). As a result, Morita theorems of Keller-Reiten and Keller-Murfet-Van den Berg are followed by specified \(d\) and \(T\) [\textit{B. Keller} and \textit{I. Reiten}, Compos. Math. 144, No. 5, 1332--1348 (2008; Zbl 1171.18008); \textit{B. Keller} et al., Compos. Math. 147, No. 2, 591--612 (2011; Zbl 1264.13016)].
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Calabi-Yau category
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cluster tilting object
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cluster category
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hereditary algebra
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