Cartesian Difference Categories: Extended Report
Abstract
Cartesian differential categories are categories equipped with a differential combinator which axiomatizes the directional derivative. Important models of Cartesian differential categories include classical differential calculus of smooth functions and categorical models of the differential lambda-calculus. However, Cartesian differential categories cannot account for other interesting notions of differentiation such as the calculus of finite differences or the Boolean differential calculus. On the other hand, change action models have been shown to capture these examples as well as more "exotic" examples of differentiation. However, change action models are very general and do not share the nice properties of a Cartesian differential category. In this paper, we introduce Cartesian difference categories as a bridge between Cartesian differential categories and change action models. We show that every Cartesian differential category is a Cartesian difference category, and how certain well-behaved change action models are Cartesian difference categories. In particular, Cartesian difference categories model both the differential calculus of smooth functions and the calculus of finite differences. Furthermore, every Cartesian difference category comes equipped with a tangent bundle monad whose Kleisli category is again a Cartesian difference category.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2002.01091,
title = {Cartesian Difference Categories: Extended Report},
author = {Mario Alvarez-Picallo and Jean-Simon Pacaud Lemay},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2002.01091},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
This version corrects the Cartesian difference structure of the Kleisli category, compared to the one found in the conference paper version. The proposed difference combinator in the conference was based on a result from another paper. Unfortunately, we have found that the result in said other paper is incorrect, and therefore so was the proposed difference combinator in the conference paper