In mathematics, compact objects, also referred to as finitely presented objects, or objects of finite presentation, are objects in a category satisfying a certain finiteness condition.
An object X in a category C which admits all filtered colimits (also known as direct limits) is called compact if the functor
\operatorname{Hom}C(X, ⋅ ):C\toSets,Y\mapsto\operatorname{Hom}C(X,Y)
commutes with filtered colimits, i.e., if the natural map
\operatorname{colim}\operatorname{Hom}C(X,Yi)\to\operatorname{Hom}C(X,\operatorname{colim}iYi)
is a bijection for any filtered system of objects
Yi
X\toYi
X\to\operatorname{colim}iYi
Yi
The terminology is motivated by an example arising from topology mentioned below. Several authors also use a terminology which is more closely related to algebraic categories: use the terminology finitely presented object instead of compact object. call these the objects of finite presentation.
The same definition also applies if C is an ∞-category, provided that the above set of morphisms gets replaced by the mapping space in C (and the filtered colimits are understood in the ∞-categorical sense, sometimes also referred to as filtered homotopy colimits).
For a triangulated category C which admits all coproducts, defines an object to be compact if
\operatorname{Hom}C(X, ⋅ ):C\toAb,Y\mapsto\operatorname{Hom}C(X,Y)
\operatorname{Hom}C(X,-)
The compact objects in the category of sets are precisely the finite sets.
For a ring R, the compact objects in the category of R-modules are precisely the finitely presented R-modules. In particular, if R is a field, then compact objects are finite-dimensional vector spaces.
Similar results hold for any category of algebraic structures given by operations on a set obeying equational laws. Such categories, called varieties, can be studied systematically using Lawvere theories. For any Lawvere theory T, there is a category Mod(T) of models of T, and the compact objects in Mod(T) are precisely the finitely presented models. For example: suppose T is the theory of groups. Then Mod(T) is the category of groups, and the compact objects in Mod(T) are the finitely presented groups.
D(R-Mod)
Compact topological spaces are not the compact objects in the category of topological spaces. Instead these are precisely the finite sets endowed with the discrete topology. The link between compactness in topology and the above categorical notion of compactness is as follows: for a fixed topological space
X
Open(X)
X
X
X
Open(X)
If
C
PreShv(C)
Cop
C
PreShv(C)
h(-):C\toPreShv(C),X\mapstohX:=\operatorname{Hom}(-,X)
X
C
hX
PreShv(C)
In a similar vein, any category
C
Ind(C)
C
C
Ind(C)
C
Ind(C)
In the unbounded derived category of sheaves of Abelian groups
D(Sh(X;Ab))
X
l{U}=\{Ui\}i
X
for some} \mathbb_)\phi\inHom(l{F}\bullet,\underset{i\inI}{colim
l{F}\bullet\inOb(D(Sh(X;Ab)))
\phi
it would have to factor through some} \text(\mathcal^\bullet, \mathbb_)\psi\in\underset{i\inI}{colim
Z | |
Ui |
X
For algebraic stacks
ak{X}
Dqc(ak{X})
ak{X}
BGa
ak{X}
G
G
k
\overline{G}=G ⊗ k\overline{k}
Ga
then the only compact object in
Dqc(ak{X})
This theorem applies, for example, to
G=GLn
Ga\toGLn
x\inGa(S)
x
n
In most categories, the condition of being compact is quite strong, so that most objects are not compact. A category
C
C
Categories which are compactly generated and also admit all colimits are called accessible categories.
For categories C with a well-behaved tensor product (more formally, C is required to be a monoidal category), there is another condition imposing some kind of finiteness, namely the condition that an object is dualizable. If the monoidal unit in C is compact, then any dualizable object is compact as well. For example, R is compact as an R-module, so this observation can be applied. Indeed, in the category of R-modules the dualizable objects are the finitely presented projective modules, which are in particular compact. In the context of ∞-categories, dualizable and compact objects tend to be more closely linked, for example in the ∞-category of complexes of R-modules, compact and dualizable objects agree. This and more general example where dualizable and compact objects agree are discussed in .