Localizing subcategory
In mathematics, Serre and localizing subcategories form important classes of subcategories of an abelian category. Localizing subcategories are certain Serre subcategories. They are strongly linked to the notion of a quotient category.
Serre subcategories
Let be an abelian category. A non-empty
full subcategory
is called a Serre subcategory (or also a dense subcategory), if for every short exact sequence
in
the object
is in
if and only if the objects
and
belong to
. In words:
is closed under subobjects, quotient objects
and extensions.
The importance of this notion stems from the fact that kernels of
exact functors between abelian categories have this property, and that
one can build (for locally small ) the quotient category (in the sense of Gabriel, Grothendieck,
Serre)
, which
has the same objects as
, is abelian, and
comes with an exact functor (called the quotient functor)
whose kernel is
.
Localizing subcategories
Let be locally small. The Serre subcategory
is called localizing,
if the quotient functor
has a
right adjoint
. Since then
, as a left adjoint, preserves colimits, each localizing subcategory is closed under colimits. The functor
(or sometimes
) is also called the localization functor, and
the section functor. The section functor is left-exact and fully faithful.
If the abelian category is moreover
cocomplete and has injective hulls (e.g. if it is a Grothendieck category), then a Serre
subcategory
is localizing if and only if
is closed under arbitrary coproducts (a.k.a.
direct sums). Hence the notion of a localizing subcategory is
equivalent to the notion of a hereditary torsion class.
If is a Grothendieck category and
a localizing subcategory, then the quotient category
is again a Grothendieck category.
The Gabriel-Popescu theorem implies that every Grothendieck category is the quotient category of a module category (with
a suitable ring) modulo a localizing subcategory.
See also
References
- Nicolae Popescu; 1973; Abelian Categories with Applications to Rings and Modules; Academic Press, Inc.; out of print.