Derived functorCategory:Homological algebra\nCategory:Category theory In mathematics, certain functors may be derived to obtain other functors closely related to the original ones. This operation, while fairly abstract, unifies a number of constructions throughout mathematics. (It is not related in any way to the derivatives of calculus.)
VariationsIf one starts with a covariant right-exact functor G, and the category A has enough projectives (i.e. for every object A of A there exists an epimorphism P → A where P is a projective object), then one can define analogously the left-derived functors LiG. For an object X of A we first construct a projective resolution of the form\n:\nwhere the Pi are projective. We apply G to this sequence, chop off the last term, and compute homology to get LiG(X). In this case, the long exact sequence will grow "to the left" rather than to the right:\n:\nis turned into \n:. Left derived functors are zero on all projective objects. One may also start with a contravariant left-exact functor F; the resulting right-derived functors are then also contravariant. The short exact sequenceApplicationsSheaf cohomology. If X is a topological space, then the category of all sheaves of abelian groups on X is an abelian category with enough injectives (a result of Grothendieck). The functor which assigns to each such sheaf L the group L(X) of global sections is left exact, and the right derived functors are the sheaf cohomology functors, usually written as H i(X,L). Slightly more generally: if (X, OX) is a ringed space, then the category of all sheaves of OX-modules is an abelian category with enough injectives, and we can again construct sheaf cohomology as the right derived functors of the global section functor. Ext functors. If R is a ring, then the category of all left R-modules is an abelian category with enough injectives. If A is a fixed left R-module, then the functor Hom(A,-) is left exact, and its right derived functors are the Ext functors ExtRi(A,B). Tor functors. The category of left R-modules also has enough projectives. If A is a fixed right R-module, then the tensor product with A gives a right exact covariant functor on the category of left R-modules; its left derivatives are the Tor functors TorRi(A,B). Group cohomology. Let G be a group. A G-module M is an abelian group M together with a group action of '\'G on M as a group of automorphisms. This is the same as a module over the group ring ZG. The G-modules form an abelian category with enough injectives. We write MG for the subgroup of M consisting of all elements of M that are held fixed by G. This is a left-exact functor, and its right derived functors are the group cohomology functors, typically written as H i(G,M'').NaturalityDerived functors and the long exact sequences are "natural" in several technical senses. First, given a commutative diagram of the form\n: \n(where the rows are exact), the two resulting long exact sequences are related by commuting squares:
Second, suppose η : F → G is a natural transformation from the left exact functor F to the left exact functor G. Then natural transformations Riη : RiF → RiG are induced, and indeed Ri becomes a functor from the functor category of all left exact functors from A to B to the full functor category of all functors from A to B. Furthermore, this functor is compatible with the long exact sequences in the following sense: if\n: \nis a short exact sequence, then a commutative diagram
is induced.
Both of these naturalities follow form the naturality of the sequence provided by the snake lemma.
GeneralizationThe more modern (and more general) approach to derived functors uses the language of derived categories. |
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\n(where the rows are exact), the two resulting long exact sequences are related by commuting squares:
Second, suppose η : F → G is a
\nis a short exact sequence, then a commutative diagram
is induced.
Both of these naturalities follow form the naturality of the sequence provided by the 