Categorical trace

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In category theory, a branch of mathematics, the categorical trace is a generalization of the trace of a matrix.

Definition

The trace is defined in the context of a symmetric monoidal category C, i.e., a category equipped with a suitable notion of a product . (The notation reflects that the product is, in many cases, a kind of a tensor product.) An object X in such a category C is called dualizable if there is another object X playing the role of a dual object of X. In this situation, the trace of a morphism f:XX is defined as the composition of the following morphisms: tr(f):1 coev XX fid XX twist XX eval 1 where 1 is the monoidal unit and the extremal morphisms are the coevaluation and evaluation, which are part of the definition of dualizable objects.[1]

The same definition applies, to great effect, also when C is a symmetric monoidal ∞-category.

Examples

  • If C is the category of vector spaces over a fixed field k, the dualizable objects are precisely the finite-dimensional vector spaces, and the trace in the sense above is the morphism
kk
which is the multiplication by the trace of the endomorphism f in the usual sense of linear algebra.
tr(idV)=i(1)irankVi.[2]

Further applications

(Kondyrev Prikhodko) have used categorical trace methods to prove an algebro-geometric version of the Atiyah–Bott fixed point formula, an extension of the Lefschetz fixed point formula.

References

  1. (Ponto Shulman)
  2. (Ponto Shulman)
  • Kondyrev, Grigory; Prikhodko, Artem (2018), "Categorical Proof of Holomorphic Atiyah–Bott Formula", J. Inst. Math. Jussieu 19 (5): 1–25, doi:10.1017/S1474748018000543