Internal bialgebroid

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description In mathematics, an internal bialgebroid is a structure which generalizes the notion of an associative bialgebroid to the setup where the ambient symmetric monoidal category of vector spaces is replaced by any abstract symmetric monoidal category (C, , I,s) admitting coequalizers commuting with the monoidal product . It consists of two monoids in the monoidal category (C, , I), namely the base monoid A and the total monoid H, and several structure morphisms involving A and H as first axiomatized by G. Böhm.[1] The coequalizers are needed to introduce the tensor product A of (internal) bimodules over the base monoid; this tensor product is consequently (a part of) a monoidal structure on the category of A-bimodules. In the axiomatics, H appears to be an A-bimodule in a specific way. One of the structure maps is the comultiplication Δ:HHAH which is an A-bimodule morphism and induces an internal A-coring structure on H. One further requires (rather involved) compatibility requirements between the comultiplication Δ and the monoid structures on H and HH.

Some important examples are analogues of associative bialgebroids in the situations involving completed tensor products.

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Context

  1. Gabriella Böhm, Internal bialgebroids, entwining structures and corings, in: Algebraic structures and their representations, 207–226, Contemp. Math. 376, Amer. Math. Soc. 2005. Cornell University Library, retrieved 11 September, 2017