Inclusion map
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In mathematics, if A is a subset of B, then the inclusion map (also inclusion function, or canonical injection) is the function i that sends each element of A to the same element in B:
- i:A → B, i(x) = x.
This and other analogous injective functions from substructures are sometimes called natural injections.
Given any morphism between objects X and Y, if there is an inclusion map into the domain i:A→X, then one can form the restriction fi of f. In many instances, one can also construct a canonical inclusion into the codomain R→Y known as the range of f.
Inclusion maps
Inclusion maps tend to be homomorphisms of algebraic structures; more precisely, given a sub-structure closed under some operations, the inclusion map will be a homomorphism for tautological reasons, given the very definition by restriction of what one checks. For example, for a binary operation @, to require that
- i(x@y) = i(x)@i(y)
Inclusion maps in geometry come in different kinds: for example embeddings of submanifolds. Contravariant objects such as differential forms restrict to submanifolds, giving a mapping in the other direction. Another example, more sophisticated, is that of affine schemes, for which the inclusions
- Spec(R/I) → Spec(R)
- Spec(R/I2) → Spec(R)
See also
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