Simplex category explained
In mathematics, the simplex category (or simplicial category or nonempty finite ordinal category) is the category of non-empty finite ordinals and order-preserving maps. It is used to define simplicial and cosimplicial objects.
Formal definition
The simplex category is usually denoted by
. There are several equivalent descriptions of this category.
can be described as the category of
non-empty finite ordinals as objects, thought of as totally ordered sets, and
(non-strictly) order-preserving functions as
morphisms. The objects are commonly denoted
(so that
is the ordinal
). The category is generated by coface and codegeneracy maps, which amount to inserting or deleting elements of the orderings. (See
simplicial set for relations of these maps.)
A simplicial object is a presheaf on
, that is a contravariant functor from
to another category. For instance,
simplicial sets are contravariant with the codomain category being the category of sets. A
cosimplicial object is defined similarly as a covariant functor originating from
.
Augmented simplex category
The augmented simplex category, denoted by
is the category of
all finite ordinals and order-preserving maps, thus
, where
. Accordingly, this category might also be denoted
FinOrd. The augmented simplex category is occasionally referred to as algebraists' simplex category and the above version is called topologists' simplex category.
A contravariant functor defined on
is called an
augmented simplicial object and a covariant functor out of
is called an
augmented cosimplicial object; when the codomain category is the category of sets, for example, these are called augmented simplicial sets and augmented cosimplicial sets respectively.
The augmented simplex category, unlike the simplex category, admits a natural monoidal structure. The monoidal product is given by concatenation of linear orders, and the unit is the empty ordinal
(the lack of a unit prevents this from qualifying as a monoidal structure on
). In fact,
is the
monoidal category freely generated by a single
monoid object, given by
with the unique possible unit and multiplication. This description is useful for understanding how any
comonoid object in a monoidal category gives rise to a simplicial object since it can then be viewed as the image of a functor from
to the monoidal category containing the comonoid; by forgetting the augmentation we obtain a simplicial object. Similarly, this also illuminates the construction of simplicial objects from
monads (and hence
adjoint functors) since monads can be viewed as monoid objects in
endofunctor categories.
See also
References
- Book: Goerss . Paul G. . Jardine . John F. . Rick Jardine. Simplicial Homotopy Theory . Birkhäuser. Basel–Boston–Berlin . Progress in Mathematics . 978-3-7643-6064-1 . 1999 . 174 . 10.1007/978-3-0348-8707-6. 1711612.
External links