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    • CommentRowNumber1.
    • CommentAuthorKarol Szumiło
    • CommentTimeSep 12th 2013
    • (edited Sep 13th 2013)

    I have stumbled upon the following small category. Its objects are all natural numbers and the set morphisms from mm to nn is {f 0,f 1,,f mn}\{ f_0, f_1, \ldots, f_{m \wedge n} \} (where mnm \wedge n is the minimum of mm and nn). The composite of f if_i and f jf_j is f ijf_{i \wedge j}. Have you seen this category before? Do you know different descriptions?

    This category is in a sense the minimal Reedy category whose direct part is \mathbb{N} (consisting of morphisms of the form f m:mnf_m : m \to n) and the inverse part is op\mathbb{N}^\mathrm{op} (consisting of f n:mnf_n : m \to n). I’m just curious whether it is good for anything.

    • CommentRowNumber2.
    • CommentAuthorTobyBartels
    • CommentTimeSep 13th 2013

    Well, it's equivalent to the category of spans in the category of finite well-ordered sets (in which a morphism is an inclusion of an initial segment). One could easily drop the finiteness condition here (which amounts to changing ‘natural number’ to ‘ordinal number’ in your description). I don't know if anybody has studied this either, but you might find something about it in that guise. (Note that the category of well-ordered sets is thin, being essentially the poset of ordinal numbers; so the category of spans is a nice way to derive a non-thin category from it.)

    • CommentRowNumber3.
    • CommentAuthorKarol Szumiło
    • CommentTimeSep 14th 2013

    That’s a good observation. More generally, I think you can take any poset PP that is well-founded and has binary meets and then the category of spans in PP is a Reedy category with PP as the direct part and P opP^\mathrm{op} as the inverse part. Still, I tried to google some related terms and I didn’t find anything relevant. Perhaps this construction is just not very interesting.