Standard construction
A concept in category theory. Other names are triple, monad and functor-algebra.
Let $ \mathfrak S $ be a category. A standard construction is a functor $ T: \mathfrak S \rightarrow \mathfrak S $ equipped with natural transformations $ \eta : 1 \rightarrow T $ and $ \mu : T ^ {2} \rightarrow T $ such that the following diagrams commute:
$$
The basic use of standard constructions in topology is in the construction of various classifying spaces and their algebraic analogues, the so-called bar-constructions.
References
[1] | J.M. Boardman, R.M. Vogt, "Homotopy invariant algebraic structures on topological spaces" , Springer (1973) |
[2] | J.F. Adams, "Infinite loop spaces" , Princeton Univ. Press (1978) |
[3] | J.P. May, "The geometry of iterated loop spaces" , Lect. notes in math. , 271 , Springer (1972) |
[4] | S. MacLane, "Categories for the working mathematician" , Springer (1971) |
Comments
The term "standard construction" was introduced by R. Godement [a1] for want of a better name for this concept. It is now entirely obsolete, having been generally superseded by "monad" (although a minority of authors still use the term "triple" ). Monads have many other uses besides the one mentioned above, for example in the categorical approach to universal algebra (see [a2], [a3]).
References
[a1] | R. Godement, "Théorie des faisceaux" , Hermann (1958) |
[a2] | E.G. Manes, "Algebraic theories" , Springer (1976) |
[a3] | M. Barr, C. Wells, "Toposes, triples and theories" , Springer (1985) |
Standard construction. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Standard_construction&oldid=18801