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Groupoid

In mathematics, especially in category theory and homotopy theory, a groupoid (less often Brandt groupoid or virtual group) generalises the notion of group in several equivalent ways. A groupoid can be seen as a:

In the presence of dependent typing, a category in general can be viewed as a typed monoid, and similarly, a groupoid can be viewed as simply a typed group. The morphisms take one from one object to another, and form a dependent family of types, thus morphisms might be typed , , say. Composition is then a total function: , so that .

Special cases include:

Groupoids are often used to reason about geometrical objects such as manifolds. Heinrich Brandt (1927) introduced groupoids implicitly via Brandt semigroups.[2]

Definitions Edit

A groupoid is an algebraic structure   consisting of a non-empty set   and a binary partial function ' ' defined on  .

Algebraic Edit

A groupoid is a set   with a unary operation   and a partial function  . Here * is not a binary operation because it is not necessarily defined for all pairs of elements of  . The precise conditions under which   is defined are not articulated here and vary by situation.

The operations   and −1 have the following axiomatic properties: For all  ,  , and   in  ,

  1. Associativity: If   and   are defined, then   and   are defined and are equal. Conversely, if one of   or   is defined, then they are both defined (and they are equal to each other), and   and   are also defined.
  2. Inverse:   and   are always defined.
  3. Identity: If   is defined, then  , and  . (The previous two axioms already show that these expressions are defined and unambiguous.)

Two easy and convenient properties follow from these axioms:

  •  ,
  • If   is defined, then  .[3]

Category theoretic Edit

A groupoid is a small category in which every morphism is an isomorphism, i.e., invertible.[1] More explicitly, a groupoid G is:

  • A set G0 of objects;
  • For each pair of objects x and y in G0, there exists a (possibly empty) set G(x,y) of morphisms (or arrows) from x to y. We write f : xy to indicate that f is an element of G(x,y).
  • For every object x, a designated element   of G(x,x);
  • For each triple of objects x, y, and z, a function  ;
  • For each pair of objects x, y a function  ;

satisfying, for any f : xy, g : yz, and h : zw:

  •   and  ;
  •  ;
  •   and  .

If f is an element of G(x,y) then x is called the source of f, written s(f), and y is called the target of f, written t(f). A groupoid G is sometimes denoted as  , where   is the set of all morphisms, and the two arrows   represent the source and the target.

More generally, one can consider a groupoid object in an arbitrary category admitting finite fiber products.

Comparing the definitions Edit

The algebraic and category-theoretic definitions are equivalent, as we now show. Given a groupoid in the category-theoretic sense, let G be the disjoint union of all of the sets G(x,y) (i.e. the sets of morphisms from x to y). Then   and   become partial operations on G, and   will in fact be defined everywhere. We define ∗ to be   and −1 to be  , which gives a groupoid in the algebraic sense. Explicit reference to G0 (and hence to  ) can be dropped.

Conversely, given a groupoid G in the algebraic sense, define an equivalence relation   on its elements by   iff aa−1 = bb−1. Let G0 be the set of equivalence classes of  , i.e.  . Denote aa−1 by   if   with  .

Now define   as the set of all elements f such that   exists. Given   and   their composite is defined as  . To see that this is well defined, observe that since   and   exist, so does  . The identity morphism on x is then  , and the category-theoretic inverse of f is f−1.

Sets in the definitions above may be replaced with classes, as is generally the case in category theory.

Vertex groups and orbits Edit

Given a groupoid G, the vertex groups or isotropy groups or object groups in G are the subsets of the form G(x,x), where x is any object of G. It follows easily from the axioms above that these are indeed groups, as every pair of elements is composable and inverses are in the same vertex group.

The orbit of a groupoid G at a point   is given by the set   containing every point that can be joined to x by an morphism in G. If two points   and   are in the same orbits, their vertex groups   and   are isomorphic: if   is any morphism from   to  , then the isomorphism is given by the mapping  .

Orbits form a partition of the set X, and a groupoid is called transitive if it has only one orbit (equivalently, if it is connected as a category). In that case, all the vertex groups are isomorphic (on the other hand, this is not a sufficient condition for transitivity; see the section below for counterexamples).

Subgroupoids and morphisms Edit

A subgroupoid of   is a subcategory   that is itself a groupoid. It is called wide or full if it is wide or full as a subcategory i.e., respectively, if   or   for every  .

A groupoid morphism is simply a functor between two (category-theoretic) groupoids.

Particular kinds of morphisms of groupoids are of interest. A morphism   of groupoids is called a fibration if for each object   of   and each morphism   of   starting at   there is a morphism   of   starting at   such that  . A fibration is called a covering morphism or covering of groupoids if further such an   is unique. The covering morphisms of groupoids are especially useful because they can be used to model covering maps of spaces.[4]

It is also true that the category of covering morphisms of a given groupoid   is equivalent to the category of actions of the groupoid   on sets.

Examples Edit

Topology Edit

Given a topological space  , let   be the set  . The morphisms from the point   to the point   are equivalence classes of continuous paths from   to  , with two paths being equivalent if they are homotopic. Two such morphisms are composed by first following the first path, then the second; the homotopy equivalence guarantees that this composition is associative. This groupoid is called the fundamental groupoid of  , denoted   (or sometimes,  ).[5] The usual fundamental group   is then the vertex group for the point  .

The orbits of the fundamental groupoid   are the path-connected components of  . Accordingly, the fundamental groupoid of a path-connected space is transitive, and we recover the known fact that the fundamental groups at any base point are isomorphic. Moreover, in this case, the fundamental groupoid and the fundamental groups are equivalent as categories (see the section below for the general theory).

An important extension of this idea is to consider the fundamental groupoid   where   is a chosen set of "base points". Here   is a (wide) subgroupoid of  , where one considers only paths whose endpoints belong to  . The set   may be chosen according to the geometry of the situation at hand.

Equivalence relation Edit

If   is a setoid, i.e. a set with an equivalence relation  , then a groupoid "representing" this equivalence relation can be formed as follows:

  • The objects of the groupoid are the elements of  ;
  • For any two elements   and   in  , there is a single morphism from   to   (denote by  ) if and only if  ;
  • The composition of   and   is  .

The vertex groups of this groupoid are always trivial; moreover, this groupoid is in general not transitive and its orbits are precisely the equivalence classes. There are two extreme examples:

  • If every element of   is in relation with every other element of  , we obtain the pair groupoid of  , which has the entire   as set of arrows, and which is transitive.
  • If every element of   is only in relation with itself, one obtains the unit groupoid, which has   as set of arrows,  , and which is completely intransitive (every singleton   is an orbit).

Examples Edit

  • If   is a smooth surjective submersion of smooth manifolds, then   is an equivalence relation[6] since   has a topology isomorphic to the quotient topology of   under the surjective map of topological spaces. If we write,   then we get a groupoid

     

    which is sometimes called the banal groupoid of a surjective submersion of smooth manifolds.
  • If we relax the reflexivity requirement and consider partial equivalence relations, then it becomes possible to consider semidecidable notions of equivalence on computable realisers for sets. This allows groupoids to be used as a computable approximation to set theory, called PER models. Considered as a category, PER models are a cartesian closed category with natural numbers object and subobject classifier, giving rise to the effective topos introduced by Martin Hyland.

Čech groupoid Edit

A Čech groupoid[6]p. 5 is a special kind of groupoid associated to an equivalence relation given by an open cover   of some manifold  . Its objects are given by the disjoint union

 ,

and its arrows are the intersections

 .

The source and target maps are then given by the induced maps

 

and the inclusion map

 

giving the structure of a groupoid. In fact, this can be further extended by setting

 

as the  -iterated fiber product where the   represents  -tuples of composable arrows. The structure map of the fiber product is implicitly the target map, since

 

is a cartesian diagram where the maps to   are the target maps. This construction can be seen as a model for some ∞-groupoids. Also, another artifact of this construction is k-cocycles

 

for some constant sheaf of abelian groups can be represented as a function

 

giving an explicit representation of cohomology classes.

Group action Edit

If the group   acts on the set  , then we can form the action groupoid (or transformation groupoid) representing this group action as follows:

  • The objects are the elements of  ;
  • For any two elements   and   in  , the morphisms from   to   correspond to the elements   of   such that  ;
  • Composition of morphisms interprets the binary operation of  .

More explicitly, the action groupoid is a small category with   and   and with source and target maps   and  . It is often denoted   (or   for a right action). Multiplication (or composition) in the groupoid is then   which is defined provided  .

For   in  , the vertex group consists of those   with  , which is just the isotropy subgroup at   for the given action (which is why vertex groups are also called isotropy groups). Similarly, the orbits of the action groupoid are the orbit of the group action, and the groupoid is transitive if and only if the group action is transitive.

Another way to describe  -sets is the functor category  , where   is the groupoid (category) with one element and isomorphic to the group  . Indeed, every functor   of this category defines a set   and for every   in   (i.e. for every morphism in  ) induces a bijection   :  . The categorical structure of the functor   assures us that   defines a  -action on the set  . The (unique) representable functor   :   is the Cayley representation of  . In fact, this functor is isomorphic to   and so sends   to the set   which is by definition the "set"   and the morphism   of   (i.e. the element   of  ) to the permutation   of the set  . We deduce from the Yoneda embedding that the group   is isomorphic to the group  , a subgroup of the group of permutations of  .

Finite set Edit

Consider the group action of   on the finite set   which takes each number to its negative, so   and  . The quotient groupoid   is the set of equivalence classes from this group action  , and   has a group action of   on it.

Quotient variety Edit

Any finite group   which maps to   give a group action on the affine space   (since this is the group of automorphisms). Then, a quotient groupoid can be of the forms  , which has one point with stabilizer   at the origin. Examples like these form the basis for the theory of orbifolds. Another commonly studied family of orbifolds are weighted projective spaces   and subspaces of them, such as Calabi–Yau orbifolds.

Fiber product of groupoids Edit

Given a diagram of groupoids with groupoid morphisms

 

where   and  , we can form the groupoid   whose objects are triples  , where  ,  , and   in  . Morphisms can be defined as a pair of morphisms   where   and   such that for triples  , there is a commutative diagram in   of  ,   and the  .[7]

Homological algebra Edit

A two term complex

 

of objects in a concrete Abelian category can be used to form a groupoid. It has as objects the set   and as arrows the set  ; the source morphism is just the projection onto   while the target morphism is the addition of projection onto   composed with   and projection onto  . That is, given  , we have

 

Of course, if the abelian category is the category of coherent sheaves on a scheme, then this construction can be used to form a presheaf of groupoids.

Puzzles Edit

While puzzles such as the Rubik's Cube can be modeled using group theory (see Rubik's Cube group), certain puzzles are better modeled as groupoids.[8]

The transformations of the fifteen puzzle form a groupoid (not a group, as not all moves can be composed).[9][10][11] This groupoid acts on configurations.

Mathieu groupoid Edit

The Mathieu groupoid is a groupoid introduced by John Horton Conway acting on 13 points such that the elements fixing a point form a copy of the Mathieu group M12.

Relation to groups Edit

Group-like structures
Totalityα Associativity Identity Divisibilityβ Commutativity
Partial magma Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded
Semigroupoid Unneeded Required Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded
Small category Unneeded Required Required Unneeded Unneeded
Groupoid Unneeded Required Required Required Unneeded
Magma Required Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded
Quasigroup Required Unneeded Unneeded Required Unneeded
Unital magma Required Unneeded Required Unneeded Unneeded
Loop Required Unneeded Required Required Unneeded
Semigroup Required Required Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded
Associative quasigroup Required Required Unneeded Required Unneeded
Monoid Required Required Required Unneeded Unneeded
Commutative monoid Required Required Required Unneeded Required
Group Required Required Required Required Unneeded
Abelian group Required Required Required Required Required
The closure axiom, used by many sources and defined differently, is equivalent.
Here, divisibility refers specifically to the quasigroup axioms.

If a groupoid has only one object, then the set of its morphisms forms a group. Using the algebraic definition, such a groupoid is literally just a group.[12] Many concepts of group theory generalize to groupoids, with the notion of functor replacing that of group homomorphism.

Every transitive/connected groupoid - that is, as explained above, one in which any two objects are connected by at least one morphism - is isomorphic to an action groupoid (as defined above)  . By transitivity, there will only be one orbit under the action.

Note that the isomorphism just mentioned is not unique, and there is no natural choice. Choosing such an isomorphism for a transitive groupoid essentially amounts to picking one object  , a group isomorphism   from   to  , and for each   other than  , a morphism in   from   to  .

If a groupoid is not transitive, then it is isomorphic to a disjoint union of groupoids of the above type, also called its connected components (possibly with different groups   and sets   for each connected component).

In category-theoretic terms, each connected component of a groupoid is equivalent (but not isomorphic) to a groupoid with a single object, that is, a single group. Thus any groupoid is equivalent to a multiset of unrelated groups. In other words, for equivalence instead of isomorphism, one does not need to specify the sets  , but only the groups   For example,

  • The fundamental groupoid of   is equivalent to the collection of the fundamental groups of each path-connected component of  , but an isomorphism requires specifying the set of points in each component;
  • The set   with the equivalence relation   is equivalent (as a groupoid) to one copy of the trivial group for each equivalence class, but an isomorphism requires specifying what each equivalence class is:
  • The set   equipped with an action of the group   is equivalent (as a groupoid) to one copy of   for each orbit of the action, but an isomorphism requires specifying what set each orbit is.

The collapse of a groupoid into a mere collection of groups loses some information, even from a category-theoretic point of view, because it is not natural. Thus when groupoids arise in terms of other structures, as in the above examples, it can be helpful to maintain the entire groupoid. Otherwise, one must choose a way to view each   in terms of a single group, and this choice can be arbitrary. In the example from topology, one would have to make a coherent choice of paths (or equivalence classes of paths) from each point   to each point   in the same path-connected component.

As a more illuminating example, the classification of groupoids with one endomorphism does not reduce to purely group theoretic considerations. This is analogous to the fact that the classification of vector spaces with one endomorphism is nontrivial.

Morphisms of groupoids come in more kinds than those of groups: we have, for example, fibrations, covering morphisms, universal morphisms, and quotient morphisms. Thus a subgroup   of a group   yields an action of   on the set of cosets of   in   and hence a covering morphism   from, say,   to  , where   is a groupoid with vertex groups isomorphic to  . In this way, presentations of the group   can be "lifted" to presentations of the groupoid  , and this is a useful way of obtaining information about presentations of the subgroup  . For further information, see the books by Higgins and by Brown in the References.

Category of groupoids Edit

The category whose objects are groupoids and whose morphisms are groupoid morphisms is called the groupoid category, or the category of groupoids, and is denoted by Grpd.

The category Grpd is, like the category of small categories, Cartesian closed: for any groupoids   we can construct a groupoid   whose objects are the morphisms   and whose arrows are the natural equivalences of morphisms. Thus if   are just groups, then such arrows are the conjugacies of morphisms. The main result is that for any groupoids   there is a natural bijection

 

This result is of interest even if all the groupoids   are just groups.

Another important property of Grpd is that it is both complete and cocomplete.

Relation to Cat Edit

The inclusion   has both a left and a right adjoint:

 
 

Here,   denotes the localization of a category that inverts every morphism, and   denotes the subcategory of all isomorphisms.

Relation to sSet Edit

The nerve functor   embeds Grpd as a full subcategory of the category of simplicial sets. The nerve of a groupoid is always a Kan complex.

The nerve has a left adjoint

 

Here,   denotes the fundamental groupoid of the simplicial set X.

Groupoids in Grpd Edit

There is an additional structure which can be derived from groupoids internal to the category of groupoids, double-groupoids.[13][14] Because Grpd is a 2-category, these objects form a 2-category instead of a 1-category since there is extra structure. Essentially, these are groupoids   with functors

 

and an embedding given by an identity functor

 

One way to think about these 2-groupoids is they contain objects, morphisms, and squares which can compose together vertically and horizontally. For example, given squares

  and  

with   the same morphism, they can be vertically conjoined giving a diagram

 

which can be converted into another square by composing the vertical arrows. There is a similar composition law for horizontal attachments of squares.

Groupoids with geometric structures Edit

When studying geometrical objects, the arising groupoids often carry a topology, turning them into topological groupoids, or even some differentiable structure, turning them into Lie groupoids. These last objects can be also studied in terms of their associated Lie algebroids, in analogy to the relation between Lie groups and Lie algebras.

Groupoids arising from geometry often possess further structures which interact with the groupoid multiplication. For instance, in Poisson geometry one has the notion of a symplectic groupoid, which is a Lie groupoid endowed with a compatible symplectic form. Similarly, one can have groupoids with a compatible Riemannian metric, or complex structure, etc.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b Dicks & Ventura (1996). The Group Fixed by a Family of Injective Endomorphisms of a Free Group. p. 6.
  2. ^ "Brandt semi-group", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994], ISBN 1-4020-0609-8
  3. ^ Proof of first property: from 2. and 3. we obtain a−1 = a−1 * a * a−1 and (a−1)−1 = (a−1)−1 * a−1 * (a−1)−1. Substituting the first into the second and applying 3. two more times yields (a−1)−1 = (a−1)−1 * a−1 * a * a−1 * (a−1)−1 = (a−1)−1 * a−1 * a = a. ✓
    Proof of second property: since a * b is defined, so is (a * b)−1 * a * b. Therefore (a * b)−1 * a * b * b−1 = (a * b)−1 * a is also defined. Moreover since a * b is defined, so is a * b * b−1 = a. Therefore a * b * b−1 * a−1 is also defined. From 3. we obtain (a * b)−1 = (a * b)−1 * a * a−1 = (a * b)−1 * a * b * b−1 * a−1 = b−1 * a−1. ✓
  4. ^ J.P. May, A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology, 1999, The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0-226-51183-9 (see chapter 2)
  5. ^ "fundamental groupoid in nLab". ncatlab.org. Retrieved 2017-09-17.
  6. ^ a b Block, Jonathan; Daenzer, Calder (2009-01-09). "Mukai duality for gerbes with connection". arXiv:0803.1529 [math.QA].
  7. ^ "Localization and Gromov-Witten Invariants" (PDF). p. 9. (PDF) from the original on February 12, 2020.
  8. ^ An Introduction to Groups, Groupoids and Their Representations: An Introduction; Alberto Ibort, Miguel A. Rodriguez; CRC Press, 2019.
  9. ^ Jim Belk (2008) Puzzles, Groups, and Groupoids, The Everything Seminar
  10. ^ The 15-puzzle groupoid (1) 2015-12-25 at the Wayback Machine, Never Ending Books
  11. ^ The 15-puzzle groupoid (2) 2015-12-25 at the Wayback Machine, Never Ending Books
  12. ^ Mapping a group to the corresponding groupoid with one object is sometimes called delooping, especially in the context of homotopy theory, see "delooping in nLab". ncatlab.org. Retrieved 2017-10-31..
  13. ^ Cegarra, Antonio M.; Heredia, Benjamín A.; Remedios, Josué (2010-03-19). "Double groupoids and homotopy 2-types". arXiv:1003.3820 [math.AT].
  14. ^ Ehresmann, Charles (1964). "Catégories et structures : extraits". Séminaire Ehresmann. Topologie et géométrie différentielle. 6: 1–31.

References Edit

  • Brandt, H (1927), "Über eine Verallgemeinerung des Gruppenbegriffes", Mathematische Annalen, 96 (1): 360–366, doi:10.1007/BF01209171, S2CID 119597988
  • Brown, Ronald, 1987, "From groups to groupoids: a brief survey," Bull. London Math. Soc. 19: 113–34. Reviews the history of groupoids up to 1987, starting with the work of Brandt on quadratic forms. The downloadable version updates the many references.
  • —, 2006. Topology and groupoids. Booksurge. Revised and extended edition of a book previously published in 1968 and 1988. Groupoids are introduced in the context of their topological application.
  • —, Higher dimensional group theory. Explains how the groupoid concept has led to higher-dimensional homotopy groupoids, having applications in homotopy theory and in group cohomology. Many references.
  • Dicks, Warren; Ventura, Enric (1996), The group fixed by a family of injective endomorphisms of a free group, Mathematical Surveys and Monographs, vol. 195, AMS Bookstore, ISBN 978-0-8218-0564-0
  • Dokuchaev, M.; Exel, R.; Piccione, P. (2000). "Partial Representations and Partial Group Algebras". Journal of Algebra. Elsevier. 226: 505–532. arXiv:math/9903129. doi:10.1006/jabr.1999.8204. ISSN 0021-8693. S2CID 14622598.
  • F. Borceux, G. Janelidze, 2001, Galois theories. Cambridge Univ. Press. Shows how generalisations of Galois theory lead to Galois groupoids.
  • Cannas da Silva, A., and A. Weinstein, Geometric Models for Noncommutative Algebras. Especially Part VI.
  • Golubitsky, M., Ian Stewart, 2006, "Nonlinear dynamics of networks: the groupoid formalism", Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 43: 305-64
  • "Groupoid", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  • Higgins, P. J., "The fundamental groupoid of a graph of groups", J. London Math. Soc. (2) 13 (1976) 145–149.
  • Higgins, P. J. and Taylor, J., "The fundamental groupoid and the homotopy crossed complex of an orbit space", in Category theory (Gummersbach, 1981), Lecture Notes in Math., Volume 962. Springer, Berlin (1982), 115–122.
  • Higgins, P. J., 1971. Categories and groupoids. Van Nostrand Notes in Mathematics. Republished in Reprints in Theory and Applications of Categories, No. 7 (2005) pp. 1–195; freely downloadable. Substantial introduction to category theory with special emphasis on groupoids. Presents applications of groupoids in group theory, for example to a generalisation of Grushko's theorem, and in topology, e.g. fundamental groupoid.
  • Mackenzie, K. C. H., 2005. Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Weinstein, Alan, "Groupoids: unifying internal and external symmetry — A tour through some examples." Also available in Postscript., Notices of the AMS, July 1996, pp. 744–752.
  • Weinstein, Alan, "The Geometry of Momentum" (2002)
  • R.T. Zivaljevic. "Groupoids in combinatorics—applications of a theory of local symmetries". In Algebraic and geometric combinatorics, volume 423 of Contemp. Math., 305–324. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI (2006)
  • fundamental groupoid at the nLab
  • core at the nLab

groupoid, this, article, about, groupoids, category, theory, algebraic, structure, with, single, binary, operation, magma, algebra, mathematics, especially, category, theory, homotopy, theory, groupoid, less, often, brandt, groupoid, virtual, group, generalise. This article is about groupoids in category theory For the algebraic structure with a single binary operation see magma algebra In mathematics especially in category theory and homotopy theory a groupoid less often Brandt groupoid or virtual group generalises the notion of group in several equivalent ways A groupoid can be seen as a Group with a partial function replacing the binary operation Category in which every morphism is invertible A category of this sort can be viewed as augmented with a unary operation on the morphisms called inverse by analogy with group theory 1 A groupoid where there is only one object is a usual group In the presence of dependent typing a category in general can be viewed as a typed monoid and similarly a groupoid can be viewed as simply a typed group The morphisms take one from one object to another and form a dependent family of types thus morphisms might be typed g A B displaystyle g A rightarrow B h B C displaystyle h B rightarrow C say Composition is then a total function B C A B A C displaystyle circ B rightarrow C rightarrow A rightarrow B rightarrow A rightarrow C so that h g A C displaystyle h circ g A rightarrow C Special cases include Setoids sets that come with an equivalence relation G sets sets equipped with an action of a group G displaystyle G Groupoids are often used to reason about geometrical objects such as manifolds Heinrich Brandt 1927 introduced groupoids implicitly via Brandt semigroups 2 Contents 1 Definitions 1 1 Algebraic 1 2 Category theoretic 1 3 Comparing the definitions 1 4 Vertex groups and orbits 1 5 Subgroupoids and morphisms 2 Examples 2 1 Topology 2 2 Equivalence relation 2 2 1 Examples 2 3 Cech groupoid 2 4 Group action 2 4 1 Finite set 2 4 2 Quotient variety 2 5 Fiber product of groupoids 2 6 Homological algebra 2 7 Puzzles 2 8 Mathieu groupoid 3 Relation to groups 4 Category of groupoids 4 1 Relation to Cat 4 2 Relation to sSet 4 3 Groupoids in Grpd 5 Groupoids with geometric structures 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesDefinitions EditA groupoid is an algebraic structure G displaystyle G ast nbsp consisting of a non empty set G displaystyle G nbsp and a binary partial function displaystyle ast nbsp defined on G displaystyle G nbsp Algebraic Edit A groupoid is a set G displaystyle G nbsp with a unary operation 1 G G displaystyle 1 G to G nbsp and a partial function G G G displaystyle G times G rightharpoonup G nbsp Here is not a binary operation because it is not necessarily defined for all pairs of elements of G displaystyle G nbsp The precise conditions under which displaystyle nbsp is defined are not articulated here and vary by situation The operations displaystyle ast nbsp and 1 have the following axiomatic properties For all a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp and c displaystyle c nbsp in G displaystyle G nbsp Associativity If a b displaystyle a b nbsp and b c displaystyle b c nbsp are defined then a b c displaystyle a b c nbsp and a b c displaystyle a b c nbsp are defined and are equal Conversely if one of a b c displaystyle a b c nbsp or a b c displaystyle a b c nbsp is defined then they are both defined and they are equal to each other and a b displaystyle a b nbsp and b c displaystyle b c nbsp are also defined Inverse a 1 a displaystyle a 1 a nbsp and a a 1 displaystyle a a 1 nbsp are always defined Identity If a b displaystyle a b nbsp is defined then a b b 1 a displaystyle a b b 1 a nbsp and a 1 a b b displaystyle a 1 a b b nbsp The previous two axioms already show that these expressions are defined and unambiguous Two easy and convenient properties follow from these axioms a 1 1 a displaystyle a 1 1 a nbsp If a b displaystyle a b nbsp is defined then a b 1 b 1 a 1 displaystyle a b 1 b 1 a 1 nbsp 3 Category theoretic Edit A groupoid is a small category in which every morphism is an isomorphism i e invertible 1 More explicitly a groupoid G is A set G0 of objects For each pair of objects x and y in G0 there exists a possibly empty set G x y of morphisms or arrows from x to y We write f x y to indicate that f is an element of G x y For every object x a designated element i d x displaystyle mathrm id x nbsp of G x x For each triple of objects x y and z a function c o m p x y z G y z G x y G x z g f g f displaystyle mathrm comp x y z G y z times G x y rightarrow G x z g f mapsto gf nbsp For each pair of objects x y a function i n v G x y G y x f f 1 displaystyle mathrm inv G x y rightarrow G y x f mapsto f 1 nbsp satisfying for any f x y g y z and h z w f i d x f displaystyle f mathrm id x f nbsp and i d y f f displaystyle mathrm id y f f nbsp h g f h g f displaystyle hg f h gf nbsp f f 1 i d y displaystyle ff 1 mathrm id y nbsp and f 1 f i d x displaystyle f 1 f mathrm id x nbsp If f is an element of G x y then x is called the source of f written s f and y is called the target of f written t f A groupoid G is sometimes denoted as G 1 G 0 displaystyle G 1 rightrightarrows G 0 nbsp where G 1 displaystyle G 1 nbsp is the set of all morphisms and the two arrows G 1 G 0 displaystyle G 1 to G 0 nbsp represent the source and the target More generally one can consider a groupoid object in an arbitrary category admitting finite fiber products Comparing the definitions Edit The algebraic and category theoretic definitions are equivalent as we now show Given a groupoid in the category theoretic sense let G be the disjoint union of all of the sets G x y i e the sets of morphisms from x to y Then c o m p displaystyle mathrm comp nbsp and i n v displaystyle mathrm inv nbsp become partial operations on G and i n v displaystyle mathrm inv nbsp will in fact be defined everywhere We define to be c o m p displaystyle mathrm comp nbsp and 1 to be i n v displaystyle mathrm inv nbsp which gives a groupoid in the algebraic sense Explicit reference to G0 and hence to i d displaystyle mathrm id nbsp can be dropped Conversely given a groupoid G in the algebraic sense define an equivalence relation displaystyle sim nbsp on its elements by a b displaystyle a sim b nbsp iff a a 1 b b 1 Let G0 be the set of equivalence classes of displaystyle sim nbsp i e G 0 G displaystyle G 0 G sim nbsp Denote a a 1 by 1 x displaystyle 1 x nbsp if a G displaystyle a in G nbsp with x G 0 displaystyle x in G 0 nbsp Now define G x y displaystyle G x y nbsp as the set of all elements f such that 1 x f 1 y displaystyle 1 x f 1 y nbsp exists Given f G x y displaystyle f in G x y nbsp and g G y z displaystyle g in G y z nbsp their composite is defined as g f f g G x z displaystyle gf f g in G x z nbsp To see that this is well defined observe that since 1 x f 1 y displaystyle 1 x f 1 y nbsp and 1 y g 1 z displaystyle 1 y g 1 z nbsp exist so does 1 x f 1 y g 1 z f g displaystyle 1 x f 1 y g 1 z f g nbsp The identity morphism on x is then 1 x displaystyle 1 x nbsp and the category theoretic inverse of f is f 1 Sets in the definitions above may be replaced with classes as is generally the case in category theory Vertex groups and orbits Edit Given a groupoid G the vertex groups or isotropy groups or object groups in G are the subsets of the form G x x where x is any object of G It follows easily from the axioms above that these are indeed groups as every pair of elements is composable and inverses are in the same vertex group The orbit of a groupoid G at a point x X displaystyle x in X nbsp is given by the set s t 1 x X displaystyle s t 1 x subset X nbsp containing every point that can be joined to x by an morphism in G If two points x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp are in the same orbits their vertex groups G x displaystyle G x nbsp and G y displaystyle G y nbsp are isomorphic if f displaystyle f nbsp is any morphism from x displaystyle x nbsp to y displaystyle y nbsp then the isomorphism is given by the mapping g f g f 1 displaystyle g to fgf 1 nbsp Orbits form a partition of the set X and a groupoid is called transitive if it has only one orbit equivalently if it is connected as a category In that case all the vertex groups are isomorphic on the other hand this is not a sufficient condition for transitivity see the section below for counterexamples Subgroupoids and morphisms Edit A subgroupoid of G X displaystyle G rightrightarrows X nbsp is a subcategory H Y displaystyle H rightrightarrows Y nbsp that is itself a groupoid It is called wide or full if it is wide or full as a subcategory i e respectively if X Y displaystyle X Y nbsp or G x y H x y displaystyle G x y H x y nbsp for every x y Y displaystyle x y in Y nbsp A groupoid morphism is simply a functor between two category theoretic groupoids Particular kinds of morphisms of groupoids are of interest A morphism p E B displaystyle p E to B nbsp of groupoids is called a fibration if for each object x displaystyle x nbsp of E displaystyle E nbsp and each morphism b displaystyle b nbsp of B displaystyle B nbsp starting at p x displaystyle p x nbsp there is a morphism e displaystyle e nbsp of E displaystyle E nbsp starting at x displaystyle x nbsp such that p e b displaystyle p e b nbsp A fibration is called a covering morphism or covering of groupoids if further such an e displaystyle e nbsp is unique The covering morphisms of groupoids are especially useful because they can be used to model covering maps of spaces 4 It is also true that the category of covering morphisms of a given groupoid B displaystyle B nbsp is equivalent to the category of actions of the groupoid B displaystyle B nbsp on sets Examples EditTopology Edit Main article Fundamental groupoid Given a topological space X displaystyle X nbsp let G 0 displaystyle G 0 nbsp be the set X displaystyle X nbsp The morphisms from the point p displaystyle p nbsp to the point q displaystyle q nbsp are equivalence classes of continuous paths from p displaystyle p nbsp to q displaystyle q nbsp with two paths being equivalent if they are homotopic Two such morphisms are composed by first following the first path then the second the homotopy equivalence guarantees that this composition is associative This groupoid is called the fundamental groupoid of X displaystyle X nbsp denoted p 1 X displaystyle pi 1 X nbsp or sometimes P 1 X displaystyle Pi 1 X nbsp 5 The usual fundamental group p 1 X x displaystyle pi 1 X x nbsp is then the vertex group for the point x displaystyle x nbsp The orbits of the fundamental groupoid p 1 X displaystyle pi 1 X nbsp are the path connected components of X displaystyle X nbsp Accordingly the fundamental groupoid of a path connected space is transitive and we recover the known fact that the fundamental groups at any base point are isomorphic Moreover in this case the fundamental groupoid and the fundamental groups are equivalent as categories see the section below for the general theory An important extension of this idea is to consider the fundamental groupoid p 1 X A displaystyle pi 1 X A nbsp where A X displaystyle A subset X nbsp is a chosen set of base points Here p 1 X A displaystyle pi 1 X A nbsp is a wide subgroupoid of p 1 X displaystyle pi 1 X nbsp where one considers only paths whose endpoints belong to A displaystyle A nbsp The set A displaystyle A nbsp may be chosen according to the geometry of the situation at hand Equivalence relation Edit If X displaystyle X nbsp is a setoid i e a set with an equivalence relation displaystyle sim nbsp then a groupoid representing this equivalence relation can be formed as follows The objects of the groupoid are the elements of X displaystyle X nbsp For any two elements x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp there is a single morphism from x displaystyle x nbsp to y displaystyle y nbsp denote by y x displaystyle y x nbsp if and only if x y displaystyle x sim y nbsp The composition of z y displaystyle z y nbsp and y x displaystyle y x nbsp is z x displaystyle z x nbsp The vertex groups of this groupoid are always trivial moreover this groupoid is in general not transitive and its orbits are precisely the equivalence classes There are two extreme examples If every element of X displaystyle X nbsp is in relation with every other element of X displaystyle X nbsp we obtain the pair groupoid of X displaystyle X nbsp which has the entire X X displaystyle X times X nbsp as set of arrows and which is transitive If every element of X displaystyle X nbsp is only in relation with itself one obtains the unit groupoid which has X displaystyle X nbsp as set of arrows s t i d X displaystyle s t id X nbsp and which is completely intransitive every singleton x displaystyle x nbsp is an orbit Examples Edit If f X 0 Y displaystyle f X 0 to Y nbsp is a smooth surjective submersion of smooth manifolds then X 0 Y X 0 X 0 X 0 displaystyle X 0 times Y X 0 subset X 0 times X 0 nbsp is an equivalence relation 6 since Y displaystyle Y nbsp has a topology isomorphic to the quotient topology of X 0 displaystyle X 0 nbsp under the surjective map of topological spaces If we write X 1 X 0 Y X 0 displaystyle X 1 X 0 times Y X 0 nbsp then we get a groupoidX 1 X 0 displaystyle X 1 rightrightarrows X 0 nbsp which is sometimes called the banal groupoid of a surjective submersion of smooth manifolds If we relax the reflexivity requirement and consider partial equivalence relations then it becomes possible to consider semidecidable notions of equivalence on computable realisers for sets This allows groupoids to be used as a computable approximation to set theory called PER models Considered as a category PER models are a cartesian closed category with natural numbers object and subobject classifier giving rise to the effective topos introduced by Martin Hyland Cech groupoid Edit See also Simplicial manifold and Nerve of a covering A Cech groupoid 6 p 5 is a special kind of groupoid associated to an equivalence relation given by an open cover U U i i I displaystyle mathcal U U i i in I nbsp of some manifold X displaystyle X nbsp Its objects are given by the disjoint union G 0 U i displaystyle mathcal G 0 coprod U i nbsp and its arrows are the intersections G 1 U i j displaystyle mathcal G 1 coprod U ij nbsp The source and target maps are then given by the induced mapss ϕ j U i j U j t ϕ i U i j U i displaystyle begin aligned s phi j U ij to U j t phi i U ij to U i end aligned nbsp and the inclusion mape U i U i i displaystyle varepsilon U i to U ii nbsp giving the structure of a groupoid In fact this can be further extended by settingG n G 1 G 0 G 0 G 1 displaystyle mathcal G n mathcal G 1 times mathcal G 0 cdots times mathcal G 0 mathcal G 1 nbsp as the n displaystyle n nbsp iterated fiber product where the G n displaystyle mathcal G n nbsp represents n displaystyle n nbsp tuples of composable arrows The structure map of the fiber product is implicitly the target map sinceU i j k U i j U i k U i displaystyle begin matrix U ijk amp to amp U ij downarrow amp amp downarrow U ik amp to amp U i end matrix nbsp is a cartesian diagram where the maps to U i displaystyle U i nbsp are the target maps This construction can be seen as a model for some groupoids Also another artifact of this construction is k cocycles s H ˇ k U A displaystyle sigma in check H k mathcal U underline A nbsp for some constant sheaf of abelian groups can be represented as a functions U i 1 i k A displaystyle sigma coprod U i 1 cdots i k to A nbsp giving an explicit representation of cohomology classes Group action Edit If the group G displaystyle G nbsp acts on the set X displaystyle X nbsp then we can form the action groupoid or transformation groupoid representing this group action as follows The objects are the elements of X displaystyle X nbsp For any two elements x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp the morphisms from x displaystyle x nbsp to y displaystyle y nbsp correspond to the elements g displaystyle g nbsp of G displaystyle G nbsp such that g x y displaystyle gx y nbsp Composition of morphisms interprets the binary operation of G displaystyle G nbsp More explicitly the action groupoid is a small category with o b C X displaystyle mathrm ob C X nbsp and h o m C G X displaystyle mathrm hom C G times X nbsp and with source and target maps s g x x displaystyle s g x x nbsp and t g x g x displaystyle t g x gx nbsp It is often denoted G X displaystyle G ltimes X nbsp or X G displaystyle X rtimes G nbsp for a right action Multiplication or composition in the groupoid is then h y g x h g x displaystyle h y g x hg x nbsp which is defined provided y g x displaystyle y gx nbsp For x displaystyle x nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp the vertex group consists of those g x displaystyle g x nbsp with g x x displaystyle gx x nbsp which is just the isotropy subgroup at x displaystyle x nbsp for the given action which is why vertex groups are also called isotropy groups Similarly the orbits of the action groupoid are the orbit of the group action and the groupoid is transitive if and only if the group action is transitive Another way to describe G displaystyle G nbsp sets is the functor category G r S e t displaystyle mathrm Gr mathrm Set nbsp where G r displaystyle mathrm Gr nbsp is the groupoid category with one element and isomorphic to the group G displaystyle G nbsp Indeed every functor F displaystyle F nbsp of this category defines a set X F G r displaystyle X F mathrm Gr nbsp and for every g displaystyle g nbsp in G displaystyle G nbsp i e for every morphism in G r displaystyle mathrm Gr nbsp induces a bijection F g displaystyle F g nbsp X X displaystyle X to X nbsp The categorical structure of the functor F displaystyle F nbsp assures us that F displaystyle F nbsp defines a G displaystyle G nbsp action on the set G displaystyle G nbsp The unique representable functor F displaystyle F nbsp G r S e t displaystyle mathrm Gr to mathrm Set nbsp is the Cayley representation of G displaystyle G nbsp In fact this functor is isomorphic to H o m G r displaystyle mathrm Hom mathrm Gr nbsp and so sends o b G r displaystyle mathrm ob mathrm Gr nbsp to the set H o m G r G r displaystyle mathrm Hom mathrm Gr mathrm Gr nbsp which is by definition the set G displaystyle G nbsp and the morphism g displaystyle g nbsp of G r displaystyle mathrm Gr nbsp i e the element g displaystyle g nbsp of G displaystyle G nbsp to the permutation F g displaystyle F g nbsp of the set G displaystyle G nbsp We deduce from the Yoneda embedding that the group G displaystyle G nbsp is isomorphic to the group F g g G displaystyle F g mid g in G nbsp a subgroup of the group of permutations of G displaystyle G nbsp Finite set Edit Consider the group action of Z 2 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 nbsp on the finite set X 2 1 0 1 2 displaystyle X 2 1 0 1 2 nbsp which takes each number to its negative so 2 2 displaystyle 2 mapsto 2 nbsp and 1 1 displaystyle 1 mapsto 1 nbsp The quotient groupoid X G displaystyle X G nbsp is the set of equivalence classes from this group action 0 1 2 displaystyle 0 1 2 nbsp and 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp has a group action of Z 2 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 nbsp on it Quotient variety Edit Any finite group G displaystyle G nbsp which maps to G L n displaystyle GL n nbsp give a group action on the affine space A n displaystyle mathbb A n nbsp since this is the group of automorphisms Then a quotient groupoid can be of the forms A n G displaystyle mathbb A n G nbsp which has one point with stabilizer G displaystyle G nbsp at the origin Examples like these form the basis for the theory of orbifolds Another commonly studied family of orbifolds are weighted projective spaces P n 1 n k displaystyle mathbb P n 1 ldots n k nbsp and subspaces of them such as Calabi Yau orbifolds Fiber product of groupoids Edit Given a diagram of groupoids with groupoid morphisms X Y Z displaystyle begin aligned amp amp X amp amp downarrow Y amp rightarrow amp Z end aligned nbsp where f X Z displaystyle f X to Z nbsp and g Y Z displaystyle g Y to Z nbsp we can form the groupoid X Z Y displaystyle X times Z Y nbsp whose objects are triples x ϕ y displaystyle x phi y nbsp where x Ob X displaystyle x in text Ob X nbsp y Ob Y displaystyle y in text Ob Y nbsp and ϕ f x g y displaystyle phi f x to g y nbsp in Z displaystyle Z nbsp Morphisms can be defined as a pair of morphisms a b displaystyle alpha beta nbsp where a x x displaystyle alpha x to x nbsp and b y y displaystyle beta y to y nbsp such that for triples x ϕ y x ϕ y displaystyle x phi y x phi y nbsp there is a commutative diagram in Z displaystyle Z nbsp of f a f x f x displaystyle f alpha f x to f x nbsp g b g y g y displaystyle g beta g y to g y nbsp and the ϕ ϕ displaystyle phi phi nbsp 7 Homological algebra Edit A two term complex C 1 d C 0 displaystyle C 1 overset d rightarrow C 0 nbsp of objects in a concrete Abelian category can be used to form a groupoid It has as objects the set C 0 displaystyle C 0 nbsp and as arrows the set C 1 C 0 displaystyle C 1 oplus C 0 nbsp the source morphism is just the projection onto C 0 displaystyle C 0 nbsp while the target morphism is the addition of projection onto C 1 displaystyle C 1 nbsp composed with d displaystyle d nbsp and projection onto C 0 displaystyle C 0 nbsp That is given c 1 c 0 C 1 C 0 displaystyle c 1 c 0 in C 1 oplus C 0 nbsp we have t c 1 c 0 d c 1 c 0 displaystyle t c 1 c 0 d c 1 c 0 nbsp Of course if the abelian category is the category of coherent sheaves on a scheme then this construction can be used to form a presheaf of groupoids Puzzles Edit While puzzles such as the Rubik s Cube can be modeled using group theory see Rubik s Cube group certain puzzles are better modeled as groupoids 8 The transformations of the fifteen puzzle form a groupoid not a group as not all moves can be composed 9 10 11 This groupoid acts on configurations Mathieu groupoid Edit The Mathieu groupoid is a groupoid introduced by John Horton Conway acting on 13 points such that the elements fixing a point form a copy of the Mathieu group M12 Relation to groups EditGroup like structures Totalitya Associativity Identity Divisibilityb CommutativityPartial magma Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded UnneededSemigroupoid Unneeded Required Unneeded Unneeded UnneededSmall category Unneeded Required Required Unneeded UnneededGroupoid Unneeded Required Required Required UnneededMagma Required Unneeded Unneeded Unneeded UnneededQuasigroup Required Unneeded Unneeded Required UnneededUnital magma Required Unneeded Required Unneeded UnneededLoop Required Unneeded Required Required UnneededSemigroup Required Required Unneeded Unneeded UnneededAssociative quasigroup Required Required Unneeded Required UnneededMonoid Required Required Required Unneeded UnneededCommutative monoid Required Required Required Unneeded RequiredGroup Required Required Required Required UnneededAbelian group Required Required Required Required Required a The closure axiom used by many sources and defined differently is equivalent b Here divisibility refers specifically to the quasigroup axioms If a groupoid has only one object then the set of its morphisms forms a group Using the algebraic definition such a groupoid is literally just a group 12 Many concepts of group theory generalize to groupoids with the notion of functor replacing that of group homomorphism Every transitive connected groupoid that is as explained above one in which any two objects are connected by at least one morphism is isomorphic to an action groupoid as defined above G X displaystyle G X nbsp By transitivity there will only be one orbit under the action Note that the isomorphism just mentioned is not unique and there is no natural choice Choosing such an isomorphism for a transitive groupoid essentially amounts to picking one object x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp a group isomorphism h displaystyle h nbsp from G x 0 displaystyle G x 0 nbsp to G displaystyle G nbsp and for each x displaystyle x nbsp other than x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp a morphism in G displaystyle G nbsp from x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp to x displaystyle x nbsp If a groupoid is not transitive then it is isomorphic to a disjoint union of groupoids of the above type also called its connected components possibly with different groups G displaystyle G nbsp and sets X displaystyle X nbsp for each connected component In category theoretic terms each connected component of a groupoid is equivalent but not isomorphic to a groupoid with a single object that is a single group Thus any groupoid is equivalent to a multiset of unrelated groups In other words for equivalence instead of isomorphism one does not need to specify the sets X displaystyle X nbsp but only the groups G displaystyle G nbsp For example The fundamental groupoid of X displaystyle X nbsp is equivalent to the collection of the fundamental groups of each path connected component of X displaystyle X nbsp but an isomorphism requires specifying the set of points in each component The set X displaystyle X nbsp with the equivalence relation displaystyle sim nbsp is equivalent as a groupoid to one copy of the trivial group for each equivalence class but an isomorphism requires specifying what each equivalence class is The set X displaystyle X nbsp equipped with an action of the group G displaystyle G nbsp is equivalent as a groupoid to one copy of G displaystyle G nbsp for each orbit of the action but an isomorphism requires specifying what set each orbit is The collapse of a groupoid into a mere collection of groups loses some information even from a category theoretic point of view because it is not natural Thus when groupoids arise in terms of other structures as in the above examples it can be helpful to maintain the entire groupoid Otherwise one must choose a way to view each G x displaystyle G x nbsp in terms of a single group and this choice can be arbitrary In the example from topology one would have to make a coherent choice of paths or equivalence classes of paths from each point p displaystyle p nbsp to each point q displaystyle q nbsp in the same path connected component As a more illuminating example the classification of groupoids with one endomorphism does not reduce to purely group theoretic considerations This is analogous to the fact that the classification of vector spaces with one endomorphism is nontrivial Morphisms of groupoids come in more kinds than those of groups we have for example fibrations covering morphisms universal morphisms and quotient morphisms Thus a subgroup H displaystyle H nbsp of a group G displaystyle G nbsp yields an action of G displaystyle G nbsp on the set of cosets of H displaystyle H nbsp in G displaystyle G nbsp and hence a covering morphism p displaystyle p nbsp from say K displaystyle K nbsp to G displaystyle G nbsp where K displaystyle K nbsp is a groupoid with vertex groups isomorphic to H displaystyle H nbsp In this way presentations of the group G displaystyle G nbsp can be lifted to presentations of the groupoid K displaystyle K nbsp and this is a useful way of obtaining information about presentations of the subgroup H displaystyle H nbsp For further information see the books by Higgins and by Brown in the References Category of groupoids EditThe category whose objects are groupoids and whose morphisms are groupoid morphisms is called the groupoid category or the category of groupoids and is denoted by Grpd The category Grpd is like the category of small categories Cartesian closed for any groupoids H K displaystyle H K nbsp we can construct a groupoid GPD H K displaystyle operatorname GPD H K nbsp whose objects are the morphisms H K displaystyle H to K nbsp and whose arrows are the natural equivalences of morphisms Thus if H K displaystyle H K nbsp are just groups then such arrows are the conjugacies of morphisms The main result is that for any groupoids G H K displaystyle G H K nbsp there is a natural bijectionGrpd G H K Grpd G GPD H K displaystyle operatorname Grpd G times H K cong operatorname Grpd G operatorname GPD H K nbsp This result is of interest even if all the groupoids G H K displaystyle G H K nbsp are just groups Another important property of Grpd is that it is both complete and cocomplete Relation to Cat Edit The inclusion i G r p d C a t displaystyle i mathbf Grpd to mathbf Cat nbsp has both a left and a right adjoint hom G r p d C C 1 G hom C a t C i G displaystyle hom mathbf Grpd C C 1 G cong hom mathbf Cat C i G nbsp hom C a t i G C hom G r p d G C o r e C displaystyle hom mathbf Cat i G C cong hom mathbf Grpd G mathrm Core C nbsp Here C C 1 displaystyle C C 1 nbsp denotes the localization of a category that inverts every morphism and C o r e C displaystyle mathrm Core C nbsp denotes the subcategory of all isomorphisms Relation to sSet Edit The nerve functor N G r p d s S e t displaystyle N mathbf Grpd to mathbf sSet nbsp embeds Grpd as a full subcategory of the category of simplicial sets The nerve of a groupoid is always a Kan complex The nerve has a left adjoint hom G r p d p 1 X G hom s S e t X N G displaystyle hom mathbf Grpd pi 1 X G cong hom mathbf sSet X N G nbsp Here p 1 X displaystyle pi 1 X nbsp denotes the fundamental groupoid of the simplicial set X Groupoids in Grpd Edit Main article Double groupoidThere is an additional structure which can be derived from groupoids internal to the category of groupoids double groupoids 13 14 Because Grpd is a 2 category these objects form a 2 category instead of a 1 category since there is extra structure Essentially these are groupoids G 1 G 0 displaystyle mathcal G 1 mathcal G 0 nbsp with functorss t G 1 G 0 displaystyle s t mathcal G 1 to mathcal G 0 nbsp and an embedding given by an identity functori G 0 G 1 displaystyle i mathcal G 0 to mathcal G 1 nbsp One way to think about these 2 groupoids is they contain objects morphisms and squares which can compose together vertically and horizontally For example given squares a displaystyle begin matrix bullet amp to amp bullet downarrow amp amp downarrow bullet amp xrightarrow a amp bullet end matrix nbsp and a displaystyle begin matrix bullet amp xrightarrow a amp bullet downarrow amp amp downarrow bullet amp to amp bullet end matrix nbsp with a displaystyle a nbsp the same morphism they can be vertically conjoined giving a diagram a displaystyle begin matrix bullet amp to amp bullet downarrow amp amp downarrow bullet amp xrightarrow a amp bullet downarrow amp amp downarrow bullet amp to amp bullet end matrix nbsp which can be converted into another square by composing the vertical arrows There is a similar composition law for horizontal attachments of squares Groupoids with geometric structures EditWhen studying geometrical objects the arising groupoids often carry a topology turning them into topological groupoids or even some differentiable structure turning them into Lie groupoids These last objects can be also studied in terms of their associated Lie algebroids in analogy to the relation between Lie groups and Lie algebras Groupoids arising from geometry often possess further structures which interact with the groupoid multiplication For instance in Poisson geometry one has the notion of a symplectic groupoid which is a Lie groupoid endowed with a compatible symplectic form Similarly one can have groupoids with a compatible Riemannian metric or complex structure etc See also Edit groupoid 2 group Homotopy type theory Inverse category Groupoid algebra not to be confused with algebraic groupoid R algebroidNotes Edit a b Dicks amp Ventura 1996 The Group Fixed by a Family of Injective Endomorphisms of a Free Group p 6 Brandt semi group Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 ISBN 1 4020 0609 8 Proof of first property from 2 and 3 we obtain a 1 a 1 a a 1 and a 1 1 a 1 1 a 1 a 1 1 Substituting the first into the second and applying 3 two more times yields a 1 1 a 1 1 a 1 a a 1 a 1 1 a 1 1 a 1 a a Proof of second property since a b is defined so is a b 1 a b Therefore a b 1 a b b 1 a b 1 a is also defined Moreover since a b is defined so is a b b 1 a Therefore a b b 1 a 1 is also defined From 3 we obtain a b 1 a b 1 a a 1 a b 1 a b b 1 a 1 b 1 a 1 J P May A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology 1999 The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 51183 9 see chapter 2 fundamental groupoid in nLab ncatlab org Retrieved 2017 09 17 a b Block Jonathan Daenzer Calder 2009 01 09 Mukai duality for gerbes with connection arXiv 0803 1529 math QA Localization and Gromov Witten Invariants PDF p 9 Archived PDF from the original on February 12 2020 An Introduction to Groups Groupoids and Their Representations An Introduction Alberto Ibort Miguel A Rodriguez CRC Press 2019 Jim Belk 2008 Puzzles Groups and Groupoids The Everything Seminar The 15 puzzle groupoid 1 Archived 2015 12 25 at the Wayback Machine Never Ending Books The 15 puzzle groupoid 2 Archived 2015 12 25 at the Wayback Machine Never Ending Books Mapping a group to the corresponding groupoid with one object is sometimes called delooping especially in the context of homotopy theory see delooping in nLab ncatlab org Retrieved 2017 10 31 Cegarra Antonio M Heredia Benjamin A Remedios Josue 2010 03 19 Double groupoids and homotopy 2 types arXiv 1003 3820 math AT Ehresmann Charles 1964 Categories et structures extraits Seminaire Ehresmann Topologie et geometrie differentielle 6 1 31 References EditBrandt H 1927 Uber eine Verallgemeinerung des Gruppenbegriffes Mathematische Annalen 96 1 360 366 doi 10 1007 BF01209171 S2CID 119597988 Brown Ronald 1987 From groups to groupoids a brief survey Bull London Math Soc 19 113 34 Reviews the history of groupoids up to 1987 starting with the work of Brandt on quadratic forms The downloadable version updates the many references 2006 Topology and groupoids Booksurge Revised and extended edition of a book previously published in 1968 and 1988 Groupoids are introduced in the context of their topological application Higher dimensional group theory Explains how the groupoid concept has led to higher dimensional homotopy groupoids having applications in homotopy theory and in group cohomology Many references Dicks Warren Ventura Enric 1996 The group fixed by a family of injective endomorphisms of a free group Mathematical Surveys and Monographs vol 195 AMS Bookstore ISBN 978 0 8218 0564 0 Dokuchaev M Exel R Piccione P 2000 Partial Representations and Partial Group Algebras Journal of Algebra Elsevier 226 505 532 arXiv math 9903129 doi 10 1006 jabr 1999 8204 ISSN 0021 8693 S2CID 14622598 F Borceux G Janelidze 2001 Galois theories Cambridge Univ Press Shows how generalisations of Galois theory lead to Galois groupoids Cannas da Silva A and A Weinstein Geometric Models for Noncommutative Algebras Especially Part VI Golubitsky M Ian Stewart 2006 Nonlinear dynamics of networks the groupoid formalism Bull Amer Math Soc 43 305 64 Groupoid Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Higgins P J The fundamental groupoid of a graph of groups J London Math Soc 2 13 1976 145 149 Higgins P J and Taylor J The fundamental groupoid and the homotopy crossed complex of an orbit space in Category theory Gummersbach 1981 Lecture Notes in Math Volume 962 Springer Berlin 1982 115 122 Higgins P J 1971 Categories and groupoids Van Nostrand Notes in Mathematics Republished in Reprints in Theory and Applications of Categories No 7 2005 pp 1 195 freely downloadable Substantial introduction to category theory with special emphasis on groupoids Presents applications of groupoids in group theory for example to a generalisation of Grushko s theorem and in topology e g fundamental groupoid Mackenzie K C H 2005 General theory of Lie groupoids and Lie algebroids Cambridge Univ Press Weinstein Alan Groupoids unifying internal and external symmetry A tour through some examples Also available in Postscript Notices of the AMS July 1996 pp 744 752 Weinstein Alan The Geometry of Momentum 2002 R T Zivaljevic Groupoids in combinatorics applications of a theory of local symmetries In Algebraic and geometric combinatorics volume 423 of Contemp Math 305 324 Amer Math Soc Providence RI 2006 fundamental groupoid at the nLab core at the nLab Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Groupoid amp oldid 1153871103, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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