Projection (mathematics)

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Image:Proj-map.png
Commutativity of this diagram is the universality of projection ?, for any map f and set X.

In mathematics, a projection is any one of several different types of functions, mappings, operations, or transformations, for example, the following:

  • In set theory, an operation typified by the jth projection map, written projj, that takes an element x = (x1, ..., xj, ..., xk) of the cartesian product X1 � ? � Xj � ? � Xk to the value projj(x) = xj. This map is always surjective.
  • In linear algebra, a linear transformation that remains unchanged if applied twice (p(u) = p(p(u))), in other words, an idempotent operator. For example, the mapping that takes a point (x, y, z) in three dimensions to the point (x, y, 0) in the plane is a projection. This type of projection naturally generalizes to any number of dimensions n for the source and k ? n for the target of the mapping. See orthogonal projection, projection (linear algebra), projection operator. In the case of orthogonal projections, the space admits a decomposition as a product, and the projection operator is a projection in that sense as well.
  • In set theory, the evaluation map sends a function f to the value f(x) for a fixed x. The space of functions YX can be identified with the cartesian product <math>\prod_{i\in X}Y_i</math>, and the evaluation map is a projection map from the cartesian product.
  • In differential topology, any fiber bundle includes a projection map as part of its definition. Locally at least this map looks like a projection map in the sense of the product topology, and is therefore open and surjective.
  • In topology, a retract is a continuous map r: X ? X which restricts to the identity map on a subspace. This satisfies a similar idempotency condition r2 = r and can be considered a generalization of the projection map. A retract which is homotopic to the identity is known as a deformation retract. This term is also used in category theory to refer to any split epimorphism.[[pt:Proje��o (matem�tica)]]


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