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In in mathematics, a 2-category is a category with " between morphisms", called 2-morphisms. A basic example is the category Cat of all (small) categories, where a 2-morphism is a natural transformation between .

The concept of a strict 2-category was first introduced by Charles Ehresmann in his work on enriched categories in 1965. The more general concept of bicategory (or weak 2-category), where composition of morphisms is only up to a 2-isomorphism, was introduced in 1967 by Jean Bénabou.

A (2, 1)-category is a 2-category where each 2-morphism is invertible.


Definitions

A strict 2-category
By definition, a strict 2-category  C consists of the data:
  • a class of 0- cells,
  • for each pairs of 0-cells a, b, a set \operatorname{Hom}(a, b) called the set of 1- cells from a to b,
  • for each pairs of 1-cells f, g in the same hom-set, a set \operatorname{2Mor}(f, g) called the set of 2- cells from f to g,
  • ordinary compositions: maps \circ : \operatorname{Hom}(b, c) \times \operatorname{Hom}(a, b) \to \operatorname{Hom}(a, c),
  • vertical compositions: maps \circ : \operatorname{2Mor}(g, h)\times \operatorname{2Mor}(f, g) \to \operatorname{2Mor}(f, h), where f, g, h are in the same hom-set,
  • horizontal compositions: maps * : \operatorname{2Mor}(u, v) \times \operatorname{2Mor}(f, g) \to \operatorname{2Mor}(u \circ f, v \circ g) for f, g : a \to b and u, v : b \to c
that are subject to the following conditions
  • the 0-cells, the 1-cells and the ordinary compositions form a category,
  • for each a, b, \operatorname{Hom}(a, b) together with the vertical compositions is a category,
  • the 2-cells together with the horizontal compositions form a category; namely, an object is a 0-cell and the hom-set from a to b is the set of all 2-cells of the form \alpha : f \Rightarrow g with some f, g : a \to b,
  • the : (\delta * \beta) \circ (\gamma * \alpha), when defined, is the same as (\delta \circ \gamma) * (\beta \circ \alpha).

The 0-cells, 1-cells, and 2-cells terminology is replaced by 0-morphisms, 1-morphisms, and 2-morphisms in some sources (see also Higher category theory). Vertical compositions and horizontal compositions are also written as \circ_1, \circ_0.

The interchange law can be drawn as a as follows:

240px]] = 240px]] = 132px]]\circ_0132px]]
\circ_1
240px]]

Here the left-hand diagram denotes the vertical composition of horizontal composites, the right-hand diagram denotes the horizontal composition of vertical composites, and the diagram in the centre is the customary representation of both. The 2-cell are drawn with double arrows ⇒, the 1-cell with single arrows →, and the 0-cell with points.

Since the definition, as can be seen, is not short, in practice, it is more common to use some generalization of category theory such as higher category theory (see below) or enriched category theory to define a strict 2-category. The notion of strict 2-category differs from the more general notion of a weak 2-category defined below in that composition of 1-cells (horizontal composition) is required to be strictly associative, whereas in the weak version, it needs only be associative up to a coherent 2-isomorphism.


As a category enriched over Cat
Given a monoidal category V, a category C enriched over V is an abstract version of a category; namely, it consists of the data
  • a class of objects,
  • for each pair of objects a, b, a hom-object \operatorname{Hom}(a, b) in V,
  • compositions: morphisms \operatorname{Hom}(b, c) \otimes \operatorname{Hom}(a, b) \to \operatorname{Hom}(a, c) in V,
  • identities: morphisms 1 \to \operatorname{Hom}(a, a) in V
that are subject to the associativity and the unit axioms. In particular, if V = \textbf{Set} is the category of sets with \otimes cartesian product, then a category enriched over it is an ordinary category.

If V = \textbf{Cat}, the category of small categories with \otimes , then a category enriched over it is exactly a strict 2-category. Indeed, \operatorname{Hom}(a, b) has a structure of a category; so it gives the 2-cells and vertical compositions. Also, each composition is a functor; in particular, it sends 2-cells to 2-cells and that gives the horizontal compositions. The interchange law is a consequence of the functoriality of the compositions.

A similar process for 3-categories leads to , and more generally to for , although such an inductive approach is not necessarily common today.


A weak 2-category
A weak 2-category or a bicategory can be defined exactly the same way a strict 2-category is defined except that the horizontal composition is required to be associative up to a coherent isomorphism. The coherent condition here is similar to those needed for monoidal categories; thus, for example, a monoidal category is the same as a weak 2-category with one 0-cell.

In higher category theory, if C is an ∞-category (a weak Kan complex) whose structure is determined only by 0-simplexes, 1-simplexes and 2-simplexes, then it is a weak (2, 1)-category; i.e., a weak 2-category in which every 2-morphism is invertible. So, a weak 2-category is an (∞, 2)-category whose structure is determined only by 0, 1, 2-simplexes.


Examples

Category of small categories
The archetypal 2-category is the category of small categories, with natural transformations serving as 2-morphisms. The objects ( 0-cells) are all small categories, and for objects and the hom-set \operatorname{Hom}(a, b) acquires a structure of a category as a . A vertical composition is the composition of natural transformations.

Similarly, given a monoidal category V, the category of (small) categories enriched over V is a 2-category. Also, if A is a category, then the \mathbf{Cat} \downarrow A is a 2-category with natural transformations that map to the identity.


Grpd
Like Cat, (categories where morphisms are invertible) form a 2-category, where a 2-morphism is a natural transformation. Often, one also considers Grpd where all 2-morphisms are invertible transformations. In the latter case, it is a (2, 1)-category.


Ord
The category Ord of is a 2-category since each hom-set has a natural preordered structure; thus a category structure by f \le g \Leftrightarrow f(x) \le g(x) for each element x.

More generally, the category of in some category is a 2-category.


Boolean monoidal category
Consider a simple monoidal category, such as the monoidal preorder Bool based on the M = ({T, F}, ∧, T). As a category this is presented with two objects {T, F} and single morphism g: F → T.

We can reinterpret this monoid as a bicategory with a single object x (one 0-cell); this construction is analogous to construction of a small category from a monoid. The objects {T, F} become morphisms, and the morphism g becomes a natural transformation (forming a for the single hom-category B( x, x)).


Coherence theorem
  • Every bicategory is "biequivalent" to a 2-category. This is an instance of (a process of replacing coherent isomorphisms with equalities.)


Duskin nerve
The Duskin nerve N^{hc}(C) of a 2-category C is a simplicial set where each n-simplex is determined by the following data: n objects x_1, \dots, x_n, morphisms f_{ij} : x_i \to x_j, \, i < j and 2-morphisms \mu_{ijk} : f_{jk} \circ f_{ij} \rightarrow f_{ik} , \, i < j < k that are subject to the (obvious) compatibility conditions. Then the following are equivalent:
  • C is a (2, 1)-category; i.e., each 2-morphism is invertible.
  • N^{hc}(C) is a weak Kan complex.
The Duskin nerve is an instance of the homotopy coherent nerve.


Functors and natural transformations
By definition, a functor is simply a structure-preserving map; i.e., objects map to objects, morphisms to morphisms, etc. So, a 2-functor between 2-categories can be defined exactly the same way. In practice though, this notion of a 2-functor is not used much. It is far more common to use their lax analogs (just as a weak 2-category is used more).

Let C,D be bicategories. We denote composition in "diagrammatic order". A lax functor P from C to D, denoted P: C\to D, consists of the following data:

  • for each object x in C, an object P_x\in D;
  • for each pair of objects x,y ∈ C a functor on morphism-categories, P_{x,y}: C(x,y)\to D(P_x,P_y);
  • for each object x∈C, a 2-morphism P_{\text{id}_x}:\text{id}_{P_x}\to P_{x,x}(\text{id}_x) in D;
  • for each triple of objects, x,y,z ∈C, a 2-morphism P_{x,y,z}(f,g): P_{x,y}(f);P_{y,z}(g)\to P_{x,z}(f;g) in D that is natural in f: x→y and g: y→z.
These must satisfy three commutative diagrams, which record the interaction between left unity, right unity, and associativity between C and D.

A lax functor in which all of the structure 2-morphisms, i.e. the P_{\text{id}_x} and P_{x,y,z} above, are invertible is called a .

There is also a lax version of a natural transformation. Let C and D be 2-categories, and let F,G\colon C\to D be 2-functors. A lax natural transformation \alpha\colon F\to G between them consists of

  • a morphism \alpha_c\colon F(c)\to G(c) in D for every object c\in C and
  • a 2-morphism \alpha_f\colon G(f)\circ\alpha_c \to \alpha_{c'}\circ F(f) for every morphism f\colon c\to c' in C
satisfying some equations (see or )


Related notion: double category
While a strict 2-category is a category enriched over Cat, a category internal to Cat is called a .


See also


Footnotes


Further reading

  • Https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2006/12/bicat_is_not_triequivalent_to.html


External links
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