Homomorphism Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- This word should not be confused with homeomorphism.
In abstract algebra, a homomorphism is a map from one algebraic structure to another of the same type that preserves all the relevant structure.
- N.B. Some authors use the word homomorphism in a larger context than that of algebra. Some take it to mean any kind of structure preserving map (such as continuous maps in topology), or even a more abstract kind of map—what we term a morphism—used in category theory. This articles treats only the algebraic context. For the more general usage see the morphism article.
- f(u * v) = f(u) @ f(v)
Each type of algebraic structure has its own type of homomorphism. For specific definitions see:
- group homomorphism
- ring homomorphism
- module homomorphism
- linear operator (a homomorphism on vector spaces)
- algebra homomorphism
- φ(fA(x1, …, xn)) = fB(φ(x1), …, φ(xn))
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2 Kernel of a homomorphism 3 Related topics |
Types of homomorphisms
The above terms are used in an analogous fashion in category theory, however, the definitions in category theory are more subtle; see the article on morphism for more details.
Note that in the larger context of structure preserving maps, it is generally insufficient to define an isomorphism as a bijective morphism. One must also require that the inverse is a morphism of the same type. In the algebraic setting (at least within the context of universal algebra) this extra condition is automatically satisfied.
Any homomorphism f : X → Y defines an equivalence relation ~ on X by a ~ b iff f(a) = f(b). The relation ~ is called the kernel of f. It is a congruence relation on X. The quotient set X/~ can then be given an object-structure in a natural way, e.g., [x] * [y] = [x * y]. In that case the image of X in Y under the homomorphism f is necessarily isomorphic to X/~; this fact is one of the isomorphism theorems. Note in some cases (e.g. groups or rings), a single equivalence class K suffices to specify the structure of the quotient, so we write it X/K. Also in these cases, it is K, rather than ~, that is called the kernel of f (cf. normal subgroup, ideal).Kernel of a homomorphism
