Draft:Category of matrices


In mathematics, the category of matrices, often denoted , is the category whose objects are natural numbers and whose morphisms are matrices, with composition given by matrix multiplication.[1]

Construction edit

Let   be an   real matrix, i.e. a matrix with   rows and   columns. Given a   matrix  , we can form the matrix multiplication   or   only when  , and in that case the resulting matrix is of dimension  .

In other words, we can only multiply matrices   and   when the number of rows of   matches the number of columns of  . One can keep track of this fact by declaring an   matrix to be of type  , and similarly a   matrix to be of type  . This way, when   the two arrows have matching source and target,  , and can hence be composed to an arrow of type  .

This is precisely captured by the mathematical concept of a category, where the arrows, or morphisms, are the matrices, and they can be composed only when their domain and codomain are compatible (similar to what happens with functions). In detail, the category   is constructed as follows:

  • Given numbers   and  , a morphism   is an   matrix, i.e. a matrix with   rows and   columns;
  • The composition of morphisms   and   (i.e. of matrices   and  ) is given by matrix multiplication.

More generally, one can define the category   of matrices over a fixed field  , such as the one of complex numbers.

Properties edit

  • The category of matrices   is equivalent to the category of finite-dimensional real vector spaces and linear maps. This is witnessed by the functor mapping the number   to the vector space  , and an   matrix to the corresponding linear map  .[2] A possible interpretation of this fact is that, as mathematical theories, abstract finite-dimensional vector spaces and concrete matrices have the same expressive power.
  • More generally, the category of matrices   is equivalent to the category of finite-dimensional vector spaces over the field   and  -linear maps.[2]
  • A linear row operation on a   matrix   can be equivalently obtained by applying the same operation to the   identity matrix, and then multiplying the resulting   matrix with  . In particular, elementary row operations correspond to elementary matrices. This fact can be seen as an instance of the Yoneda lemma for the category of matrices.[3]

Particular subcategories edit

  • For every fixed  , the morphisms   of   are the   matrices, and form a monoid, canonically isomorphic to the monoid of linear endomorphisms of  . In particular, the invertible   matrices form a group. The same can be said for a generic field  .
  • A stochastic matrix is a real matrix of nonnegative entries, such that the sum of each column is one. Stochastic matrices include the identity and are closed under composition, and so they form a subcategory of  .

Citations edit

  1. ^ Riehl (2016), pp. 4–5
  2. ^ a b Riehl (2016), p. 30
  3. ^ Riehl (2016), pp. 60–61

References edit

  • Riehl, Emily (2016). Category Theory in Context. Dover. ISBN 9780486809038.

External links edit