adjunction
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin adjunctio, from adjungere: compare French adjonction, and see adjunct.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]adjunction (countable and uncountable, plural adjunctions)
- The act of joining; the thing joined or added.
- (law) The joining of personal property owned by one to that owned by another.
- (mathematics, chiefly algebra and number theory) The process of adjoining elements to an algebraic structure (usually a ring or field); the result of such a process.
- The ring obtained after the adjunction of the elements and to the ring may be denoted .
- The field adjunction can be obtained from by adjoining to .
- (category theory, loosely) A relationship between a pair of categories that makes the pair, in a weak sense, equivalent.
- (category theory, strictly) A natural isomorphism between a pair of functors satisfying certain conditions, whose existence implies a close relationship between the functors and between their (co)domains; the natural isomorphism, functors, and their (co)domains thought of as a single object.
- (formally, given two categories and and (covariant) functors and ) A natural isomorphism (where the hom-functors are understood as bifunctors from to ). See Adjoint functors on Wikipedia.Wikipedia .
- Meronyms: adjoint, left adjoint, right adjoint
- (formally, given two categories and and (covariant) functors and ) A natural isomorphism (where the hom-functors are understood as bifunctors from to ). See Adjoint functors on Wikipedia.Wikipedia .
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]the thing joined or added
a form of similarity between a pair of categories mapped to each other by dual morphisms
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References
[edit]
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