Concept

Abelian category

Summary
In mathematics, an abelian category is a in which morphisms and can be added and in which s and cokernels exist and have desirable properties. The motivating prototypical example of an abelian category is the , Ab. The theory originated in an effort to unify several cohomology theories by Alexander Grothendieck and independently in the slightly earlier work of David Buchsbaum. Abelian categories are very stable categories; for example they are and they satisfy the snake lemma. The class of abelian categories is closed under several categorical constructions, for example, the category of chain complexes of an abelian category, or the category of functors from a to an abelian category are abelian as well. These stability properties make them inevitable in homological algebra and beyond; the theory has major applications in algebraic geometry, cohomology and pure . Definitions A category is abelian if it is and *it has a zero object, *it has all binary biproducts, *it has
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