Virtual concepts in the theory of accessible categories (Q2674544)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Virtual concepts in the theory of accessible categories
scientific article

    Statements

    Virtual concepts in the theory of accessible categories (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    14 September 2022
    0 references
    The notion of locally presentable enriched category had appeared quite early in the literature [\textit{G. M. Kelly}, Cah. Topologie Géom. Différ. Catégoriques 23, 3--42 (1982; Zbl 0538.18006)] (at about the same time as the monograph on enriched categories [\textit{G. M. Kelly}, Basic concepts of enriched category theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. London: London Mathematical Society (1982; Zbl 0478.18005)]). However, more than a decade passed since, until the related notion of accessibility was considered in the enriched context [\textit{F. Borceaux} and \textit{C. Quinteriro}, Bull. Aust. Math. Soc. 54, No. 3, 489--501 (1996; Zbl 0881.18011); \textit{F. Borceux} et al., Theory Appl. Categ. 4, 47--72 (1998; Zbl 0981.18006)]. The present paper enhances the results previously obtained by Borceux-Quinteiro-Rosický in [loc. cit.] on enriched accessible categories. Additionally, new proofs are often provided to these (strongly influenced, in the reviewer's opinion, by [\textit{G. M. Kelly}, Cah. Topologie Géom. Différ. Catégoriques 23, 3--42 (1982; Zbl 0538.18006); \textit{G. M. Kelly} and \textit{V. Schmitt}, Theory Appl. Categ. 14, 399--423 (2005; Zbl 1082.18004)]. To fix the notations, let \(\mathcal V\) be a symmetric monoidal closed category, locally presentable as a closed category, and let \(\alpha\) be a regular cardinal, larger than the one controlling the degree of presentability in \(\mathcal V\). A \(\mathcal V\)-category \(\mathcal A\) is \(\alpha\)-accessible if it has \(\alpha\)-flat colimits and there is some small subcategory \(\mathcal C\) consisting of \(\alpha\)-presentable objects such that every object of \(\mathcal A\) is an \(\alpha\)-flat colimit of objects of \(\mathcal C\). A \(\mathcal V\)-category \(\mathcal A\) is conically \(\alpha\)-accessible if in the above, the \(\alpha\)-flat colimits are replaced by conically \(\alpha\)-filtered colimits and the \(\alpha\)-presentable objects by conically \(\alpha\)-presentable objects. How are the two notion related, and related to ordinarily accessibility? If the \(\mathcal V\)-category is complete or \(\alpha\)-cocomplete, then \(\alpha\)-accessibility coincides with conically \(\alpha\)-accessibility, and, in particular, implies (enriched) locally \(\alpha\)-presentability. Ordinarily accessibility, together with \(\alpha\)-flat cocompleteness and presentability of each object, implies enriched accessibility. A similar result holds for conically accessibility. More important, each \(\alpha\)-accessible \(\mathcal V\)-category is simultaneously \(\beta\)-accessible, conically \(\beta\)-accessible and ordinarily \(\beta\)-accessible for every cardinal \(\beta\) sharply greater than \(\alpha\); the novelty in the proof here is the independence of \(\beta\) on the \(\mathcal V\)-category in question. The main results of the paper, developed in Section 4, relate enriched accessibility to virtual reflectivity and orthogonality conditions. Quoting from the paper: ``The word \textit{virtual} here refers to something that ``lives'' in the free completion \(\mathcal P^{\dagger} \mathcal A\) of a \(\mathcal V\)-category \(\mathcal A\)''. Theorem 4.32 shows that for a full subcategory \(\mathcal A\) of an accessible \(\mathcal V\)-category \(\mathcal K\), the following are equivalent: (i) \(\mathcal A\) is accessible and so is the embedding functor \(F:\mathcal A \to \mathcal K\); (ii) \(\mathcal A\) is virtually reflective and \(F\) is accessible; (iii) \(\mathcal A\) is a virtual orthogonality class. Virtual reflectiveness refers to the functor \(\widehat F X = \mathcal K(X,F-)\) being small for each \(X \in \mathcal K\) (compare with being representable in case of genuine reflectiveness), while a virtual orthogonality class is a full subcategory of \(\mathcal K\) spanned by objects orthogonal to a family of arrows of the form \(ZX \to P\), where \(Z\) is the embedding of \(\mathcal K\) into its free completion \(\mathcal P^{\dagger}\mathcal K\). Turning to conically accessible \(\mathcal V\)-categories, the authors obtain in Theorem 4.36 a similar characterisation. In particular, conical accessibility of a full subcategory can be recognised at the level of the underlying ordinary category. In the last section of the paper it is proved that the \(2\)-category of (conically) accessible \(\mathcal V\)-categories, (conically) accessible \(\mathcal V\)-functors, and \(\mathcal V\)-natural transformations has all flexible limits and are computed as in \({\mathcal V}{-}{\mathbf{CAT}}\). The corresponding result for ordinary categories is well-known [\textit{M. Makkai} and \textit{R. Paré}, Accessible categories: The foundations of categorical model theory. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society (1989; Zbl 0703.03042)].
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    enriched categories
    0 references
    accessible categories
    0 references
    flat functor
    0 references
    filtered colimits
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references