Karoubi envelope
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In mathematics the Karoubi envelope (or Cauchy completion or idempotent splitting) of a category C is a classification of the idempotents of C, by means of an auxiliary category. It is named for the French mathematician Max Karoubi.
Given a category C, an idempotent of C is an endomorphism
with
.
An idempotent e: A → A is said to split if there is an object B and morphisms f: A → B, g : B → A such that e = g f and 1B = f g.
The Karoubi envelope of C, sometimes written Split(C), is the category whose objects are pairs of the form (A, e) where A is an object of C and
is an idempotent of C, and whose morphisms are triples of the form
where
is a morphism of C satisfying
(or equivalently
).
Composition in Split(C) is as in C, but the identity morphism on (A,e) in Split(C) is (e,e,e), rather than the identity on A.
The category C embeds fully and faithfully in Split(C). In Split(C) every idempotent splits, and Split(C) is the universal category with this property. The Karoubi envelope of a category C can therefore be considered as the "completion" of C which splits idempotents.
The Karoubi envelope of a category C can equivalently be defined as the full subcategory of
(the presheaves over C) of retracts of representable functors. The category of presheaves on C is equivalent to the category of presheaves on Split(C).
[edit] Automorphisms in the Karoubi envelope
An automorphism in Split(C) is of the form
, with inverse
satisfying:
If the first equation is relaxed to just have
, then f is a partial automorphism (with inverse g). A (partial) involution in Split(C) is a self-inverse (partial) automorphism.
[edit] Examples
- If C has products, then given an isomorphism
the mapping
, composed with the canonical map
of symmetry, is a partial involution.





