Category of functors
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(Redirected from Natural transformation)
This article focuses on the category of contravariant functors between two categories.
The category of functors
Let
and
be two categories. The category of functors
has
- Objects are functors
- A morphism of functors
is a natural transformation
; i.e., for each object
of
, a morphism in
such that for all morphisms
in
, the diagram (DIAGRAM) commutes.
A natural isomorphism is a natural transformation
such that
is an isomorphism in
for every object
. One can verify that natural isomorphisms are indeed isomorphisms in the category of functors.
An important class of functors are the representable functors; i.e., functors that are naturally isomorphic to a functor of the form
.
Examples
- In the theory of schemes, the presheaves
are often referred to as the functor of points of the scheme X. Yoneda's lemma allows one to think of a scheme as a functor in some sense, which becomes a powerful interpretation; indeed, meaningful geometric concepts manifest themselves naturally in this language, including (for example) functorial characterizations of smooth morphisms of schemes.
The Yoneda lemma
Let
be a category and let
be objects of
. Then
- If
is any contravariant functor
, then the natural transformations of
to
are in correspondence with the elements of the set
.
- If the functors
and
are isomorphic, then
and
are isomorphic in
. More generally, the functor
,
, is an equivalence of categories between
and the full subcategory of representable functors in
.

