Concept information
Preferred term
quiver
Definition
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In mathematics, especially representation theory, a quiver is another name for a multidigraph; that is, a directed graph where loops and multiple arrows between two vertices are allowed. Quivers are commonly used in representation theory: a representation V of a quiver assigns a vector space V(x) to each vertex x of the quiver and a linear map V(a) to each arrow a. In category theory, a quiver can be understood to be the underlying structure of a category, but without composition or a designation of identity morphisms. That is, there is a forgetful functor from Cat (the category of categories) to Quiv (the category of multidigraphs). Its left adjoint is a free functor which, from a quiver, makes the corresponding free category.
(Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiver_(mathematics))
Broader concept
In other languages
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French
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/PSR-KKK654BJ-F
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