Introduction
The sense in which we use the terms “abstract” and “objective” is that of Lawvere and Schanuel (e.g., see Schanuel Reference Schanuel2000). Coproduct and product of finite sets have the virtue, over abstract addition and multiplication of natural numbers, of universal properties that can help in understanding of combinatorial equations as bijections.
The process of moving from objective to abstract is very old. Like quantization in Physics, the reverse process is also rather old, yet it is not well defined even up to any reasonable notion of equivalence. The term “categorification” was coined by Crane–Frenkel in low-dimensional topology (see Crane and Frenkel Reference Crane and Frenkel1994) and then adopted by representation theorists.
The Introduction of David Chan’s (Reference Chan2024) paper provides good background to the roles of Mackey and Tambara functors in equivariant stable homotopy theory. In particular, the third paragraph begins with the following sentence:
While Mackey functors should be thought of as the correct analogue of an abelian group in the equivariant setting, the role of commutative rings is played by objects known as Tambara functors.
Motivated by terminology and constructions in Blumberg and Hill (Reference Bénabou2018, Reference Bénabou2022), Chan (Reference Chan2024), Greenlees and May (Reference Greenlees and May1997), Hill and Hopkins (Reference Hill and Hopkins2016), Jackowski and McClure (Reference Jackowski and McClure1992) and Ullman (Reference Ullman2013), my goal was to investigate in what way Tambara functors on a lextensive category
$\mathscr{E}$
are Mackey functors with extra structure. However, I soon moved to the objective level (in a different direction from Balmer and Dell’Ambrogio Reference Balmer and Dell’Ambrogio2020) and found what I consider is a satisfactory confirmation of the analogy between Mackey functors and abelian groups, and commutative rings and Tambara functors. For the case where
$\mathscr{E}$
is a category of sets on which a group acts, I see that a left adjoint to an inclusion of Mackey functors into Tambara functors, thought of as the analog of the monoid-ring functor, was constructed and applied by Nakaoka (Reference Nakaoka2011).
The main idea is that the basic construction is a variant of Bénabou’s bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}$
of spans
$U\xleftarrow {u}S\xrightarrow {v}V$
in a category
$\mathscr{E}$
with pullbacks (see Bénabou, Reference Bénabou1967). We allow
$\mathscr{E}$
to be replaced by a bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
equipped with a chosen wide (= all object inclusive), locally full sub-bicategory
$\mathscr{R}$
with a few conditions making it what we here call a protocalibration. For our bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
, we restrict our 1-morphisms to spans for which the left leg
$u$
is in
$\mathscr{R}$
yet we allow our 2-morphisms to be isomorphism classes of span morphisms which are pseudo on the left and lax on the right. Its universal property is that categories parametrized by
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
are essentially categories parametrized by
$\mathscr{C}$
which are
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete. This last term refers to the existence of pointwise left extensions along
$\mathscr{C}$
-parametrized functors of the form
$\mathscr{C}(\!-,U)\xrightarrow {\mathscr{C}(\!-,r)}\mathscr{C}(\!-,V)$
with
$r\in \mathscr{R}$
.
Other constructions are obtained by duality and iteration. If
$\mathscr{L}$
is a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{co}}$
then categories parametrized by
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{C} = (\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{L}}\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{co}})^{\textrm{co}}$
are essentially categories parametrized by
$\mathscr{C}$
which are
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete. Moreover, with the specific iteration
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{E}_*}(_{\mathscr{P}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}\,)$
, we obtain the opposite of the bicategory
$\textrm{Ply}\mathscr{E}$
of polynomials in a category
$\mathscr{E}$
with pullbacks where
$\mathscr{P}$
consists of the powerful morphisms in
$\mathscr{E}$
and
$\mathscr{E}_*$
consists of spans with the left leg
$u$
invertible. The universal property (in the case where
$\mathscr{E}$
is locally cartesian closed) obtained by iteration agrees with that proved by Charles Walker (Reference Walker2019).
Rings are Eilenberg-Moore algebras for a monad on
$\textrm{Set}$
obtained as a composite monad using a Beck distributive law (Beck Reference Beck1969) of the monad for monoids over the monad for abelian groups. In Proposition 10.6, we see that objective Tambara functors are Eilenberg-Moore pseudo-algebras for a pseudomonad on the bicategory of finite (bicategorical) product preserving pseudofunctors
$\mathscr{E}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
obtained as a composite pseudomonad using a pseudodistributive law over the pseudomonad for objective Mackey functors.
I am very grateful to the referee for thoroughly helpful suggestions. As an editor, I realize such referees are invaluable.
1. Parametrized Categories and Protocalibrations
Categories varying over (Street Reference Street1981) (“fibered over” Bénabou Reference Bénabou1975, “indexed by” Johnstone et al. Reference Johnstone, Paré, Rosebrugh, Schumacher, Wood and Wraith1978, or “parametrized by” Schumacher and Street Reference Schumacher and Street1988) a category or bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
can be regarded as pseudofunctors
$\mathbb{X} : \mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
. We think of an object of
$\mathbb{X}U$
as a generalized object of the
$\mathscr{C}$
-variable category
$\mathbb{X}$
. We write
for the (strict) bicategory of pseudofunctors (called “homomorphisms” in Bénabou Reference Blumberg and Hill1967), pseudonatural transformations, and modifications.
A
$\mathscr{C}$
-variable category
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
is cocomplete with respect to a morphism
$j : \mathbb{A} \to \mathbb{B}$
in
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
(see Section 7 of Street Reference Street1981) when every morphism
$f : \mathbb{A} \to \mathbb{X}$
has a pointwise (see Section 4 of Street Reference Street1974) left extension along
$j$
. Generally, pointwiseness translates to a lax form of the Chevalley-Beck (CB) condition. However, the pseudo form is relevant when dealing with groupoid fibrations as we will now remind the reader.
A morphism
$\kappa : z\to x$
in a category
$E$
is cartesian for a functor
$p : E \to B$
when the following square (1.1) is a pullback in
$\textrm{Set}$
for all objects
$k$
of
$E$
.

A functor
$p : E\to B$
is a groupoid fibration (over
$B$
) when every morphism of
$E$
is cartesian for
$p$
and, for all
$x\in E$
and
$\phi : b\to px$
in
$B$
, there exists a morphism
$\kappa : z\to x$
in
$E$
and an isomorphism
$b\cong pz$
whose composite with
$p\kappa$
is
$\phi$
. A functor
$p : E\to B$
is a groupoid opfibration (over
$B$
) when
$p : E^{\textrm{op}}\to B^{\textrm{op}}$
is a groupoid fibration.
A morphism
$p : E\to B$
in a bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
is a groupoid fibration when, for all objects
$U\in \mathscr{C}$
, the functor
$\mathscr{C}(U,p) : \mathscr{C}(U,E)\to \mathscr{C}(U,B)$
is a groupoid fibration. The proof of Proposition 1.1 is essentially as for Proposition 23 of Street (Reference Street1974); alternatively, check it in
$\textrm{Cat}$
and use Yoneda since all concepts are representable. The term bipullback (or “bicategorical pullback”) is used here in the sense of Item (1.23) of Street (Reference Street1980) and Section 2 of Street (Reference Street2020).
Proposition 1.1. In any finitely complete bicategory, suppose
$p : E\to B$
is a groupoid opfibration. In diagram (1.2), the 2-morphism
$\sigma$
exhibits
$k$
as a pointwise left extension of
$f$
along
$p$
if and only if, for all morphisms
$b$
with the square a bipullback, the pasted composite at
$p$
exhibits
$kb$
as a left extension of
$f\tilde {b}$
along
$\tilde {p}$
.

If
$\mathscr{R}$
is a set of morphisms of a bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
, we say
$\mathbb{X}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete when it is cocomplete with respect to all morphisms
$\mathscr{C}(\!-,j) : \mathscr{C}(\!-,U)\to \mathscr{C}(\!-,V)$
for
$j : U\to V$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
. A pseudonatural transformation
$\theta : \mathbb{X}\to \mathbb{Y}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuous when it preserves left extensions along the
$\mathscr{C}(\!-,j)$
for
$j\in \mathscr{R}$
.
Let
$\textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
denote the sub-bicategory of
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
consisting of the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete objects and
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuous morphisms.
We are interested in those
$\mathscr{R}$
in possession of most of the properties in common with the “calibrations” of Street (Reference Street2020), and the calibrations of Bénabou (Reference Blumberg and Hill1975), when
$\mathscr{C}$
is a category. In the case where
$\mathscr{C}$
is a category of
$G$
-sets, these conditions plus closure under coproducts (which we will also require in Section 6) are those called “indexing categories” in equivariant stable homotopy theory; see Chan (Reference Chan2024).
Definition 1.2. A protocalibration of a bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
is a set
$\mathscr{R}$
of morphisms when it satisfies the four conditions:
-
I. all equivalences are in
$\mathscr{R}$
and any morphism isomorphic to one in
$\mathscr{R}$
is in
$\mathscr{R}$
; -
C. composites of morphisms in
$\mathscr{R}$
are in
$\mathscr{R}$
; -
P. for all
$U\xrightarrow {f} W$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
and all
$V\xrightarrow {g} W$
in
$\mathscr{C}$
, the bicategorical pullback
$P\xrightarrow {\bar {f}} V$
of
$f$
along
$g$
exists and is in
$\mathscr{R}$
; -
G. every morphism in
$\mathscr{R}$
is a groupoid opfibration.
Each protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
will be identified with the sub-bicategory of
$\mathscr{C}$
containing all objects, only the morphisms in
$\mathscr{R}$
, and all 2-morphisms between them. Notice that a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{co}}$
is the same as one for
$\mathscr{C}$
except for condition (G) where “groupoid opfibration” must be replaced by “groupoid fibration.”
Example 1.3.
-
1. Suppose
$\mathscr{C}$
is just a category (locally discrete as a bicategory). Then every morphism is both a groupoid fibration and a groupoid opfibration, and bicategorical pullbacks are pullbacks. If
$\mathscr{C}$
has pullbacks, the set of all morphisms is a protocalibration. -
2. Again suppose
$\mathscr{C}$
is a category. If pullbacks of powerful (= exponentiable) morphisms exist then the powerful morphisms form a protocalibration (see Corollary 2.6 of Street and Verity (Reference Street and Verity2010). This applies to the category
$\mathscr{C}=\textrm{Cat}$
of categories and functors where the powerful morphisms are the Giraud-Conduché functors (Conduché Reference Conduché1972). -
3. Let
$\mathscr{E}$
be a category with pullbacks and every morphism powerful. The groupoid fibrations (= left-adjoint morphisms) in the bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}$
of spans in
$\mathscr{E}$
is a protocalibration of
$(\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}\,)^{\textrm{co}}$
(see Propositions 4.1 and 8.3 of Conduché Reference Street1972).
Proposition 1.4 (Compare Street Reference Street1980, Proposition 9.12, Street Reference Street1981, Proposition 7.12). Let
$\mathscr{R}$
be a protocalibration of the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
. A
$\mathscr{C}$
-variable category
$\mathbb{X}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete if and only if, for all
$f \in \mathscr{R}$
, the functor
$\mathbb{X}f$
has a left adjoint
$\mathbb{X}_*f$
and, for all bicategorical pullback squares

in
$\mathscr{E}$
, the mate
of the isomorphism
is invertible. A pseudonatural transformation
$\theta : \mathbb{X}\to \mathbb{Y}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuous if and only if, for all
$U\xrightarrow {f}W$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
, the mate
$\mathring {\theta }_f : \mathbb{Y}_*f\circ \theta _U\to \theta _W\circ \mathbb{X}_*f$
of
$\theta _f : \theta _U\circ \mathbb{X}f\to \mathbb{Y}f\circ \theta _W$
is invertible.
Remark 1.5. Henceforth, we occasionally allow ourselves to omit the invertible 2-morphisms in bipullbacks such as (1.3).
Lemma 1.6. Suppose
$\mathscr{C}$
has binary bicategorical productsFootnote
1
and
$\mathscr{R}$
is a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{C}$
. If
$X\xrightarrow {f}Y$
and
$X'\xrightarrow {f'}Y'$
are in
$\mathscr{R}$
then so too is
$X\times X'\xrightarrow {f\times f'}Y\times Y'$
. So, if
$\mathscr{C}$
has finite bicategorical products then
$\mathscr{R}$
is a monoidal sub-bicategory of the cartesian monoidal bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
.
Proof.
The morphism
$X\times X'\xrightarrow {f\times f'}Y\times Y'$
is the composite of
$f\times 1_{X'}$
and
$1_Y\times f'$
which are, respectively, bipullbacks of
$f$
and
$f'$
along projections.
Corollary 1.7. Suppose
$\mathscr{C}$
has binary biproducts and
$\mathscr{R}$
is a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{C}$
. If
$\mathbb{Z}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete then so is
$\mathbb{Z}(\!-\times W)$
for all
$W\in \mathscr{C}$
.
Proof.
Cocompleteness of
$\mathbb{Z}(\!-\times W)$
with respect to any
$f$
amounts, by Yoneda, to cocompleteness of
$\mathbb{Z}$
with respect to
$f\times 1_W$
.
Proposition 1.8. Suppose
$\mathscr{C}$
has binary biproducts and
$\mathscr{R}$
is a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{C}$
. For
$\mathbb{Y}$
and
$\mathbb{Z}$
in
$\textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
, the object
$[\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}]_{\mathscr{R}} \in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
, defined on objects by
and on morphisms
$W'\xrightarrow {h}W$
by composition with
$\mathbb{Z}(\!-\times h)$
, is in
$\textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
.
Proof.
By the last sentence of Proposition 1.4, we need to see that, if
$\theta : \mathbb{Y}\to \mathbb{Z}(\!-\times W)$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuous, so too is
$\mathbb{Z}(\!-\times h)\circ \theta$
. Take
$V\xrightarrow {r}U$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
. The right square in the diagram

is the value of
$\mathbb{Z}$
on a bipullback in
$\mathscr{C}$
. The invertibility of the mate of the pasted 2-morphism follows from
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuity of
$\theta$
and
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompleteness of
$\mathbb{Z}$
.
2.
$\mathscr{R}$
-Cocompletion
Suppose
$\mathscr{R}$
is a protocalibration of the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
. The
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
of
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
is described as follows (see Bénabou Reference Bénabou1975; Street Reference Street1972, Reference Street1981). An object of the category
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
is a pair
$(U\xleftarrow {u}S, x\in \mathbb{X}S)$
with
$u\in \mathscr{R}$
; we might think of such an object as a
$U$
-indexed family of generalized objects of
$\mathbb{X}$
. A morphism
of
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
is an isomorphism class of triples
$(S\xrightarrow {w}S', u'w\cong u, x\xrightarrow {\xi } (\mathbb{X}w)x')$
where
$\xi$
is a morphism of
$\mathbb{X}S$
; if we identify representables with their representing objects, the picture of such a morphism is a lax morphism (2.4) of spans in
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
.

For
$r : V\to U$
in
$\mathscr{C}$
, define the functor
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}r :\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U\to \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}V$
to take
$(u,x)$
to
$(u_r, (\mathbb{X}r_u)x)$
where

are bipullbacks, and
$(w,\xi )$
to
$(\bar {w},\bar {\xi })$
where
$\bar {w}$
is defined by compatible
$u'_r\bar {w} \cong u_r$
,
$r_{u'}\bar {w} \cong wr_u$
, and
$\bar {\xi }$
by
For a 2-morphism
$\alpha : r\Rightarrow s : V\to U$
, let
$S\xleftarrow {s_u}Q\xrightarrow {u_s}V$
be the bipullback of the cospan
$S\xrightarrow {u}U\xleftarrow {s}V$
. Since
$u$
is a groupoid opfibration, there exists a cocartesian 2-morphism
$\kappa : r_u\Rightarrow k$
and isomorphism
$su_r\cong uk$
such that
$u\kappa$
is the composite
$ur_u\cong ru_r\xrightarrow {\alpha u_r}su_r\cong uk$
. If
$r\in \mathscr{R}$
then
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}r$
has a left adjoint
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}_*r : \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}V\to \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
taking
$(V\xleftarrow {v}T, y\in \mathbb{X}T)$
to
$(U\xleftarrow {rv}T, y\in \mathbb{X}T)$
(noting that
$rv\in \mathscr{R}$
by condition (C)). To verify the pseudo-Chevalley-Beck condition, we refer to the bipullbacks (2.6) with
$f, u\in \mathscr{R}$
.

Then we see that
\begin{eqnarray*} (\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}g\circ \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}_*f) (u,x) & = & (\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}g) (fu,x) \ \cong \ (f_gu_{g_f}, (\mathbb{X}g_{fu})x) \\ & = & (\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}_*f_g)(u_{g_f},(\mathbb{X}g_{fu})x) \\ & \cong & (\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}_*f_g\circ \mathbb{X}g_f)(u,x) \end{eqnarray*}
naturally in
$(u,x)\in \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
. So
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{E}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete by Proposition 1.4.
Remark 2.1. Suppose
$\mathscr{C}$
is a category with pullbacks so that we can take
$\mathscr{R}$
to contain all morphisms. The terminal object
$\mathbf{1}$
of
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
takes all objects of
$\mathscr{C}$
to the terminal category. Then
$\mathbb{C} : = \overrightarrow {\mathbf{1}}$
takes
$U\in \mathscr{C}$
to the slice category
$\mathscr{C}_{/ U}$
and is defined on morphisms using pullback. Notice that an ordinary category has coproducts if and only if all pointwise left Kan extensions into it exist along functors between discrete categories. Also
$\textrm{Set}$
is the coproduct cocompletion of the terminal ordinary category. Now we see that
$\mathbb{C}$
is the coproduct cocompletion of the terminal
$\mathscr{C}$
-variable category. This is one justification for viewing
$\mathbb{C}$
as playing the role in
$\mathscr{C}$
-variable category theory of
$\textrm{Set}$
in ordinary category theory. Also
$\mathbb{C}$
is the internal full subcategory of
$\mathscr{C}$
at the heart of the Yoneda structure for
$\mathscr{C}$
-variable category theory; see Street (Reference Street1980).
Definition 2.2. For a protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
of a bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
, we write
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}$
for the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion
$\overrightarrow {\mathbf{1}}$
of
$\mathbf{1}$
. For each object
$U\in \mathscr{C}$
, the objects of
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}(U)$
are objects
$S\xrightarrow {u} U$
over
$U$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
but the morphisms
$S\xrightarrow {w}S'$
in the pseudocommutative triangles defining morphisms in
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}(U)$
are not required to be in
$\mathscr{R}$
. When
$\mathscr{C}$
has bipullbacks and all morphisms are groupoid opfibrations, we write
$\mathbb{C}$
for
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{C}}$
, but notice that
$\mathbb{C}_*$
exists even without the bipullbacks since it is defined on morphism using composition.
Remark 2.3. The coproduct completion
$\textrm{Fam}X$
of a category
$X$
can be constructed as the lax comma category

Analogously, the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
of
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
can be constructed as the lax comma category

in
$\textrm{Ps}(\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}},\textrm{CAT})$
, where the bottom arrow is the restricted Yoneda embedding and the right arrow corresponds to
$\mathbb{X}$
under the bicategorical Yoneda Lemma.
Directly from the explicit descriptions, we can verify the following.
Proposition 2.4. For a protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
of a bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
and a pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{X} \in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
, the unique
$! : \mathbb{X}\to \mathbf{1}$
induces a pseudonatural transformation
$\mathbb{X}! : \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}\to \mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}$
, which is a componentwise fibration. If
$\mathscr{C}$
is a finitely complete category and each
$! : S\to 1$
is in
$\mathscr{R}$
then
$\mathbb{X}!_{1} : \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}1\to \mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}1$
is the fibration over
$\mathscr{C}$
constructed by Grothendieck from the pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{X} : \mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
.
There is a pseudonatural transformation
$\eta _{\mathbb{X}} : \mathbb{X}\to \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
whose component
$\eta _{\mathbb{X} U} : \mathbb{X}U\to \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
at
$U\in \mathscr{E}$
is defined by
$\eta _{\mathbb{X} U}x = (U\xleftarrow {1_U}U, x\in \mathbb{X} U)$
.
Proposition 2.5. Suppose
$\mathscr{R}$
is a protocalibration of the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
. Then
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete if and only if
$\eta _{\mathbb{X}}$
has a left adjoint in
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
.
Proof.
A left adjoint to
$\eta _{\mathbb{X} U} : \mathbb{X}U\to \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
precisely gives, for each
$(u,x)\in \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
, an object
$u_*(x)\in \mathbb{X}U$
and an isomorphism
$\mathbb{X}U(u_*(x), y) \cong \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U((u,x),(1_U,y))$
natural in
$y\in \mathbb{X}U$
. However,
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U((u,x),(1_U,y))\cong \mathbb{X}S(x,(\mathbb{X}u)y)$
. So this amounts precisely to having a left adjoint
$\mathbb{X}_*u$
to
$\mathbb{X}u$
for all
$u\in \mathscr{R}$
. Pseudonaturality of
$\eta _{\mathbb{X}}$
amounts to the
$\mathscr{R}$
-Chevalley-Beck condition for
$\mathbb{X}$
. The result follows now from Proposition 1.4.
We think of the left adjoint to
$\eta _{\mathbb{X}}$
as assigning a coproduct to the indexed families of generalized objects.
Corollary 2.6. The pseudonatural transformation
$\eta _{\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}} : \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}\to \overrightarrow {\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}}$
has a left adjoint
$\mu _{\mathbb{X}} : \overrightarrow {\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}}\to \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
in
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
.
Much as in Section 2 of Street (Reference Street1974) and Section 3 of Street (Reference Street1980), for each protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
of
$\mathscr{C}$
, we see we have a Kock-Zöberlein (Kock Reference Kock1972-73, Reference Kock1995; Zöberlein Reference Zöberlein1973) pseudomonad
on
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
.
Corollary 2.7. The inclusion of the sub-bicategory
$\textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
of
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
, consisting of the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete objects and
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuous morphisms, is pseudomonadic. That is, the inclusion is biequivalent over
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
to the forgetful pseudofunctor from the bicategory of Eilenberg-Moore pseudo-algebras for the pseudomonad
$\overrightarrow {(\!-\!)}_{\mathscr{R}}$
. In particular,
$\textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
is a complete bicategory and bicategorical limits are preserved by the inclusion.
The opposite
$\mathbb{X}^{\textrm{op}}$
of
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
is obtained by composition with the 2-isomorphism
$(\!-\!)^{\textrm{op}} : \textrm{Cat}\to \textrm{Cat}^{\textrm{co}}$
. This is the value on objects for a 2-isomorphism
Suppose
$\mathscr{L}$
is a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{co}}$
. We define
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
to be
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete when
$\mathbb{X}^{\textrm{op}}$
is
$\mathscr{L}$
-cocomplete. It follows that the
$\mathscr{L}$
-completion
$\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
of
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
is
$\overrightarrow {(\mathbb{X}^{\textrm{op}})}^{\textrm{op}}$
. If
$\mathbb{X}$
is
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete and
$V\xrightarrow {f}U$
is in
$\mathscr{L}$
, we write
$\mathbb{X}_!f$
for the right adjoint of
$\mathbb{X}f : \mathbb{X}U\to \mathbb{X}V$
.
We write
$_{\mathscr{L}\,}{\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}}{ }$
for the locally full sub-bicategory of
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
consisting of the
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete objects and
$\mathscr{L}$
-continuous morphisms. The 2-isomorphism (2.7) induces an isomorphism
We have a dual Kock-Zöberlein pseudomonad on
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
for which the Eilenberg-Moore pseudo-algebras are the
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete objects where the algebra action on the object is right adjoint to the unit.
An object of
$\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
is a pair
$(U\xleftarrow {u}S, x\in \mathbb{X}S)$
with
$u\in \mathscr{L}$
, as for
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
. A morphism
of
$\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
is an isomorphism class of triples
$(S'\xrightarrow {w}S, u'\cong uw, (\mathbb{X}w)x\xrightarrow {\zeta }x')$
where
$\zeta$
is a morphism of
$\mathbb{X}S'$
.

For
$r : V\to U$
in
$\mathscr{E}$
, the functor
$\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}r :\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}U\to \overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}V$
takes the object
$(u,x)$
to
$(u_r, (\mathbb{X}r_u)x)$
with notation as in (2.5), which is used also in defining
$\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}r$
on morphisms. The unit
$\rho _{\mathbb{X}} : \mathbb{X}\to \overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
for the pseudomonad has components at
$U$
the functor
$\rho _U$
taking
$x\in \mathbb{X}U$
to
$(1_U, x)\in \overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
and
$\zeta : x \to x'$
to
$(1_U,\zeta )$
. For emphasis, we state the dual form of Proposition 2.5:
Corollary 2.8. Suppose
$\mathscr{L}$
is a protocalibration of the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{co}}$
. Then
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
is
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete if and only if
$\rho _{\mathbb{X}}$
has a right adjoint in
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
.
We think of the right adjoint to
$\rho _{\mathbb{X}}$
as assigning a product to the indexed families of generalized objects of
$\mathbb{X}$
.
3.
$\mathscr{R}$
-Spans and
$\mathscr{R}$
-Cocompleteness
We look at slight variants of Bénabou’s bicategory of spans (Bénabou Reference Blumberg and Hill1967; also see Day Reference Day1974 and Carboni et al. Reference Carboni, Kelly, Walters and Wood2007). Let
$\mathscr{R}$
be a protocalibration of the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
; see Definition 1.2. A (left)
$\mathscr{R}$
-span from
$U$
to
$V$
in
$\mathscr{C}$
is a diagram
$U\xleftarrow {u}S\xrightarrow {v}V$
in
$\mathscr{C}$
with
$u\in \mathscr{R}$
. There is a bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
whose objects are those of
$\mathscr{C}$
, whose morphisms are the
$\mathscr{R}$
-spans, and whose 2-morphisms (denoted
$[f,\sigma ]$
by abuse of language) are the isomorphism classes of diagrams (3.10).Footnote
2

The composition of
$\mathscr{R}$
-spans is defined on morphisms using bipullback. To define the composition on 2-morphisms, we use the constructions (in dual form for groupoid opfibrations rather than fibrations) given in Proposition 5.2 (iii) and Proposition 8.4 of Street (Reference Street2020). Explicitly, consider diagram (3.11)

where we have bipullbacks (3.12).

Using the groupoid opfibration property of
$r'$
, we obtain a 2-morphism
$\kappa : gv_r\Rightarrow k$
and
$r'k\cong v'fr_v$
such that
$r'\kappa$
is the composite
Now define
$h : P\to P'$
, up to isomorphism using the bipullback property of
$P'$
, by
$r'_{v'}h\cong f r_v$
and
$v'_{r'}h\cong k$
. Then, we have the diagram

where
$\rho$
is the composite
$gv_r\xrightarrow {\kappa }k\cong v'_{r'}h$
. Now, we define the desired composite of the two span morphisms
$[f, \sigma ]$
and
$[g, \tau ]$
appearing in diagram (3.11) to be
$[h, s'\rho ]$
.
We have a pseudofunctor
taking the morphism
$U\xrightarrow {r} V$
to the
$\mathscr{R}$
-span
$r_* = (U\xleftarrow {1_U}U\xrightarrow {r}V)$
and the 2-morphism
$\alpha : r\Rightarrow s$
to the 2-morphism

If
$r\in \mathscr{R}$
then
$r_*$
has a right adjoint
$r^* = (V\xleftarrow {r}U\xrightarrow {1_U}U)$
in
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
. Every morphism
$U\xleftarrow {u}S\xrightarrow {v}V$
of
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
decomposes as
$v_*\circ u^*$
.
Restriction along the opposite of (3.13) defines a pseudofunctor
which is pseudomonadic since
$(\!-\!)_*$
is the identity on objects and the restriction has both left and right biadjoints. Re-identification of the pseudo-algebras as follows is an objective variant of Lindner’s result (Lindner Reference Lindner1976).
Proposition 3.1. Restriction along the opposite of (3.13) defines a bicategorical equivalence
Proof.
We shall describe the inverse biequivalence. Each
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
extends along the opposite of
$(\!-\!)_*$
to a pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}} : (\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C})^{\textrm{op}} \to \textrm{Cat}$
, which agrees with
$\mathbb{X}$
on objects and is defined on morphisms by
$\mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}(v_*\circ u^*) = \mathbb{X}_*u\circ \mathbb{X}v$
. For 2-morphisms, we define
$\mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}[f,\sigma ] : \mathbb{X}_*u\circ \mathbb{X}v\to \mathbb{X}_*u'\circ \mathbb{X}v'$
to be the mate under the adjunction
$\mathbb{X}_*u\dashv \mathbb{X}u$
of the composite
where
$\eta _{u'}$
is the unit for
$\mathbb{X}_*{u'}\dashv \mathbb{X}u'$
. The composition-preservation constraints come from the pointwiseness in
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompleteness: referring to the diagram (3.11), we have
\begin{eqnarray*} \mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}(v_*\circ u^*)\circ \mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}(s_*\circ r^*) & \cong & \mathbb{X}_*u\circ \mathbb{X}v\circ \mathbb{X}_*r\circ \mathbb{X}s \\[5pt] & \cong & \mathbb{X}_*u\circ \mathbb{X}_*r_v\circ \mathbb{X}v_r\circ \mathbb{X}s \\[5pt] & \cong & \mathbb{X}_*(u\circ r_v)\circ \mathbb{X}(s\circ v_r) \\[5pt] & \cong & \mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}((s\circ v_r)_* \circ (u\circ r_v)^*) \\[5pt] & \cong & \mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}(s_*\circ {v_r}_* \circ {r_v}^*\circ u^*) \\[5pt] & \cong & \mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}(s_*\circ r^*\circ v_*\circ u^*). \end{eqnarray*}
Clearly
$\mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}\circ (\!-\!)_*\simeq \mathbb{X}$
.
For any
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuous pseudonatural transformation
$\theta : \mathbb{X}\to \mathbb{Y}$
, we have the diagram

for all
$S\xrightarrow {u}U$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
and
$S\xrightarrow {v}V$
in
$\mathscr{C}$
(using terminology from Proposition 1.4 for the mate of
$\theta _u$
). The pasted composite diagram exhibits the extension of
$\theta$
to a pseudonatural transformation
$\theta _{\textrm{sp}} : \mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}\to \mathbb{Y}_{\textrm{sp}}$
. For a modification
$\theta \Rightarrow \phi : \mathbb{X}\to \mathbb{Y}$
, we can keep the same components on objects to define the extended modification
$\theta _{\textrm{sp}} \Rightarrow \phi _{\textrm{sp}} : \mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}\to \mathbb{Y}_{\textrm{sp}}$
.
Let
$\mathscr{L}$
be a protocalibration of the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{co}}$
. So we can define
The 2-morphisms are represented by diagrams of the form (3.15).

For completeness, we state the dual form of Proposition 3.1.
Proposition 3.2. Restriction along the opposite of
$(\!-\!)_* : \mathscr{C} \to _{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{C}$
defines a bicategorical equivalence
4. A Distributive Law From Compatibility
Let
$\mathscr{E}$
be a category with pullbacks. The functor defined by pulling back along
$u : S\to U$
is denoted by
$\Delta _u : \mathscr{E}_{/ U}\to \mathscr{E}_{/ S}$
. There is always a left adjoint to
$\Delta _u$
denoted by
$\Sigma _u$
and obtained by composition with
$u$
. Recall that a morphism
$u : S\to U$
is called powerful (or “exponentiable”) when
$\Delta _u$
has a right adjoint
$\Pi _u$
. Then, for each
$a : A\to U$
, the counit of the adjunction
$\Delta _u\dashv \Pi _u$
gives a morphism
$e$
as in diagram (4.16).

Let
$\mathscr{P}$
denote the set of powerful morphisms in
$\mathscr{E}\,$
; by Corollary 2.6 of Street & Verity (Reference Street and Verity2010),
$\mathscr{P}$
is a protocalibration in the sense of Definition 1.2.
For this section, fix two protocalibrations
$\mathscr{L}$
and
$\mathscr{R}$
of the category
$\mathscr{E}$
. We are particularly interested in the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion and the
$\mathscr{L}$
-completion. So, in this section,
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
will mean the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion of
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{E}$
and
$\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
will mean the
$\mathscr{L}$
-completion of
$\mathbb{X}$
.
Our Definition 4.1 is motivated by concepts in Blumberg-Hill (Reference Bénabou2018, Reference Bénabou2022) and Chan (Reference Chan2024).
Definition 4.1. Suppose
$\mathscr{L}$
and
$\mathscr{R}$
are protocalibrations of the category
$\mathscr{E}$
. We say the pair
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
is compatible when
$\mathscr{L}\subseteq \mathscr{P}\cap \mathscr{R}$
and
$\Pi _rv\in \mathscr{R}$
whenever
$r\in \mathscr{L}$
and
$v\in \mathscr{R}$
.
Example 4.2. In a category
$\mathscr{E}$
with pullbacks, the maximum example of a compatible pair is
$(\mathscr{P},\mathscr{E}\,)$
.
Lemma 4.3. Suppose the pair
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
of protocalibrations of
$\mathscr{E}$
is compatible. Spans in
$\mathscr{E}$
with left leg invertible and right leg in
$\mathscr{R}$
are morphisms in
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}$
and as such form a protocalibration of
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}$
denoted by
$\mathscr{R}_*$
.
Proof.
$\mathscr{R}_*$
consists of the spans isomorphic to
$w_* = (V\xleftarrow {1_V}V\xrightarrow {w}V')$
for some
$V\xrightarrow {w}V'$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
. The only condition for a protocalibration which is not totally clear is (G); but this follows from the fact that each square (4.17) is a bipullback of a groupoid fibration.

Suppose
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
is compatible. There is a bicategorical distributive law (in the sense of Marmolejo Reference Marmolejo1999) of the form
where the component functor
takes
$(U\xleftarrow {u}S, S\xleftarrow {a}A, x \in \mathbb{X}A)$
, where
$u\in \mathscr{L}$
and
$a\in \mathscr{R}$
, to
in the notation of diagram (4.16).
Proposition 4.4. If
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{E}$
is
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete then so is the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
. Moreover, the unit
$\eta _{\mathbb{X}} : \mathbb{X}\to \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
is in
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{CAT}}{}\mathscr{E}$
.
Proof.
Suppose
$V\xrightarrow {r}U$
is in
$\mathscr{L}$
. We will use the right adjoints
$\Pi _r$
and
$\mathbb{X}_!r$
available because of powerfulness and of
$\mathscr{L}$
-completeness of
$\mathbb{X}$
.
We must show that
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}r$
has a right adjoint. For each
$(V\xleftarrow {v}T,y\in \mathbb{X}T)\in \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}V$
, we must produce an object
$(U\xleftarrow {v'}R,y'\in \mathbb{X}R)\in \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
and a bijection
natural in
$(u,x)\in \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U$
, where the following square is a pullback.

Take an element
$(w,\xi )$
as shown in (4.19) of the left-hand side of (4.18).

Since
$r$
is powerful, morphisms
$w$
making the left triangle of (4.19) commute are in natural bijection with morphisms
$w' : S \to R$
such that
$\Pi _rv\circ w' = u$
where
$R$
is the domain of
$\Pi _rv$
. Since
$\bar {r}$
is in
$\mathscr{L}$
and
$\mathbb{X}$
is
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete, morphisms
$\xi : (\mathbb{X}\bar {r})x\to (\mathbb{X}w)y$
are in natural bijection with morphisms
$\bar {\xi } : x\to (\mathbb{X}_!\bar {r})(\mathbb{X}w)y$
. The diagram below shows how
$w$
and
$w'$
are related.

Also, we have the Chevalley-Beck isomorphism
$(\mathbb{X}w') (\mathbb{X}_!\tilde {r}) \cong (\mathbb{X}_!\bar {r})(\mathbb{X}\Delta _{\tilde {r}}w')$
. Consequently, we have
$(\mathbb{X}_!\bar {r})(\mathbb{X}w) \cong (\mathbb{X}_!\bar {r})(\mathbb{X}\Delta _{\tilde {r}}w')(\mathbb{X}e)\cong (\mathbb{X}w') (\mathbb{X}_!\tilde {r})(\mathbb{X}e)$
. So
$\bar {\xi } : x\to (\mathbb{X}_!\bar {r})(\mathbb{X}w)y$
are in bijection with
$\bar {\xi } : x\to (\mathbb{X}w') (\mathbb{X}_!\tilde {r})(\mathbb{X}e)y$
. Therefore, we have the desired bijection (4.18) with
$v'=\Pi _rv$
and
$y'= (\mathbb{X}_!\tilde {r})(\mathbb{X}e)y$
.
Since
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete, it already satisfies the CB-condition for left adjoints
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}_*r$
. By replacing all functors in that invertibility condition by their right adjoints when
$r\in \mathscr{L}$
, we induce an invertible mate yielding the CB-condition for the right adjoints
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}_!r$
. So
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
is
$\mathscr{L}$
-complete.
The second sentence of the proposition follows on checking that the canonical natural transformation

is invertible.
The pseudomonad
$\overrightarrow {(\!-\!)}$
on
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{E}$
therefore lifts to
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{CAT}}{}\mathscr{E}$
.

The pseudo-algebras for the lifted pseudomonad are those of the composite pseudomonad
$\mathbb{X}\mapsto \overrightarrow {\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}}$
on
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{E}$
form the 2-category we denote by
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{CAT}}{_{\mathscr{R}}}\mathscr{E}$
at the top of the diamond (4.21) of inclusion 2-functors. Using Lemma 4.3 and Proposition 3.1, we have biequivalences
While the composite pseudomonad is not Kock-Zöberlein or dual Kock-Zöberlein, the pseudo-algebra structures are unique up to isomorphism: it is a property of an
$\mathscr{E}$
-variable category to be a pseudo-algebra for both
$\overleftarrow {(\!-\!)}$
and
$\overrightarrow {(\!-\!)}$
, and to satisfy the distributive law.

5. Polynomials as Spans of Spans
Let
$\mathscr{E}$
be a category with pullbacks.
There is a bicategory
$\textrm{Ply}\mathscr{E}$
of polynomials in
$\mathscr{E}\,$
; in the notation of Walker (Reference Walker2019) it is
$\textrm{Poly}(\mathscr{E}\,)$
and in the notation of Proposition 8.4 of Street (Reference Street2020) it is the bicategory
$\textrm{PolySpn}{\mathscr{E}}$
. The objects are those of
$\mathscr{E}$
. The morphisms from
$X$
to
$Y$
are polynomials
$p = (X\xleftarrow {r} A\xrightarrow {n}B\xrightarrow {t} Y)$
in
$\mathscr{E}$
with
$n$
powerful. The morphisms between polynomials are as in Subsection 2.11 of Gambino and Kock (Reference Gambino and Kock2013) and Definition 8.2 of Street (Reference Street2020): they are isomorphism classes of commutative diagrams

wherein the square as indicated is a pullback. Composition uses bipullback of spans of spans (see Gambino and Kock Reference Gambino and Kock2013; Street Reference Street2020; Weber Reference Weber2015). As a consequence of Theorem 5.1 and Proposition 6.6 below, finite coproducts exist in each
$\textrm{Ply}{\mathscr{E}}(X,Y)$
and are preserved by precomposition with morphisms, yet generally not by postcomposition making the bicategory
$\textrm{Ply}{\mathscr{E}}$
enriched in a certain skew-monoidal bicategory
$\textrm{Cat}_{+ \textrm{sk}}$
(extending a bit the terminology of Garner and Lemay Reference Garner and Lemay2021).
Recall the philosophy of Street (Reference Street2020) that it is useful to regard
$p$
as a span
in
$\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}$
. Then the morphisms interpret as diagrams

We modify this a bit by taking a compatible pair
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
of protocalibrations on
$\mathscr{E}$
and restricting the polynomials (5.23) to those with
$n\in \mathscr{L}$
and
$t\in \mathscr{R}$
. Restricting the morphisms of
$\textrm{Ply}{\mathscr{E}}$
in this way, we obtain a sub-bicategory which we denote by
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Ply}}{_{\mathscr{R}}}\mathscr{E}$
.
Theorem 5.1. If
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
is a compatible pair of protocalibrations on the category
$\mathscr{E}$
and
${{\mathscr{R}}_*}$
is as in Lemma 4.3 then
Proof.
The 2-morphisms of
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}_*}(_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}\,)$
are isomorphism classes of morphisms as pictured in (5.25).

Unpacking this shows that the data involved is exactly as in the diagram (5.22) in
$\mathscr{E}$
. While unpacking, just note that the 2-morphism
$\lambda$
in
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}$
is in the reverse direction as a morphism of spans.
Corollary 5.2.
$\textrm{Ps}(_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Ply}}{_{\mathscr{R}}}\mathscr{E}, \textrm{Cat}) \sim _{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{CAT}}{_{\mathscr{R}}}\mathscr{E}$
Proof. Using Theorem 5.1 and Propositions 3.1 and 3.2, we have
\begin{eqnarray*} \phantom {aaaaaaaaaa} \textrm{Ps}(_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Ply}}{_{\mathscr{R}}}\mathscr{E}, \textrm{Cat}) &\sim & \textrm{CAT}(\textrm{Spn}_{{{\mathscr{R}}_*}}(_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}\,)) \\ &\sim & \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}_*}(_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}\,) \\ & \sim & _{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{CAT}}{_{\mathscr{R}}}\mathscr{E} \ . \ \phantom {aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa} \end{eqnarray*}

6. Finite Coproducts for Spans and Polynomials
Examples of the concepts of this section are provided by lextensive categories. Recall that a category
$\mathscr{E}$
is lextensive (in the sense used by Schanuel Reference Schanuel2000) when it has finite limits, finite coproducts, and, equivalences
The second equivalence takes an object
$(A\xrightarrow {h}U, B\xrightarrow {k}V)\in \mathscr{E}_{/U}\times \mathscr{E}_{/V}$
to the object
$(A+B\xrightarrow {h+k}U+V)\in \mathscr{E}_{/U+V}$
; the fact that this inverse equivalence is fully faithful means that a commutative triangle

implies there are unique
$r : A\to A'$
and
$s : B\to B'$
such that
$f = r+s$
,
$h = h'r$
and
$h'=k's$
.
It follows that the initial object
$0$
is strictly initial and, for every coproduct diagram
$U\xrightarrow {i}U+V\xleftarrow {j}V$
in
$\mathscr{E}$
and every
$R\xrightarrow {f}U+V$
, there is a diagram

in which the squares are pullbacks and the top row is also a coproduct diagram.
This should motivate the following bicategorical concepts.
Suppose the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
admits the binary bicoproduct
$U\xrightarrow {i}U+V\xleftarrow {j}V$
and
$\mathscr{R}$
is a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{C}$
. For the pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}} : \mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
of Definition 2.2, we have a canonical comparison functor
taking
$Z\xrightarrow {w}U+V$
to the pair
$(X\xrightarrow {w_i}U, Y\xrightarrow {w_j}V)$
defined by bipullbacks

Lemma 6.1. Suppose the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
admits finite bicoproducts and the protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
is closed under them. Then the canonical comparison functors
have left adjoints, respectively, defined on objects by
Proof. This is an exercise in using the universal properties of bicoproduct and bipullback.
Definition 6.2. Suppose
$\mathscr{R}$
is a protocalibration of the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
. We say a bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive when it admits finite bicoproducts and these are taken into finite biproducts by the pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}} : \mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
of Definition 2.2.
When
$\mathscr{R}$
is closed under finite bicoproducts, the inverse equivalences are the left adjoints in Definition 6.1.
Example 6.3. Suppose
$\mathscr{E}$
is a lextensive category (such as the category of finite
$G$
-sets for a group
$G$
). Then the maximum protocalibration
$\mathscr{E}$
is closed under finite coproducts and
$\mathscr{E}$
is
$\mathscr{E}$
-extensive.
Example 6.4. Again suppose
$\mathscr{E}$
is a lextensive category. The subcategory
$\mathscr{P}$
consisting of the powerful morphisms is closed under finite coproducts. To see this, first realize that injections
$X\xrightarrow {i}X+Y$
are powerful since
$\mathscr{E}_{/ (X+Y)}\xrightarrow {\Delta _i}\mathscr{E}_{/ X}$
transports across equivalence to the projection
$\mathscr{E}_{/ X}\times \mathscr{E}_{/ Y}\to \mathscr{E}_{/ X}$
which has a right adjoint since
$\mathscr{E}_{/ Y}$
has a terminal object. Then notice that pullback along
$0\to A$
is equivalent to the functor
$\mathscr{E}_{/A} \to \mathbf{1}$
whose right adjoint picks out the terminal object and, if
$A\xrightarrow {u}X$
and
$B\xrightarrow {v}X$
are powerful, then pullback along
$A+B\xrightarrow {[u,v]} X$
is equivalent to
$\mathscr{E}_{/X}\xrightarrow {(\Delta _u,\Delta _v)}\mathscr{E}_{/A}\times \mathscr{E}_{/B}$
which has a right adjoint taking
$(U\xrightarrow {a}A, V\xrightarrow {b}B)$
to the product
$\Pi _u(a)\times \Pi _v(b)$
in
$\mathscr{E}_{/X}$
. Indeed,
$\mathscr{E}$
is
$\mathscr{P}$
-extensive because the equivalence
$\mathscr{E}_{/ (X+Y)}\simeq \mathscr{E}_{/ X}\times \mathscr{E}_{/ Y}$
restricts to the powerful objects.
Proposition 6.5. Suppose the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive and that the protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
is closed under the finite bicoproducts. If
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
preserves finite bicategorical products then the
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
also preserves finite bicategorical products.
Proof.
The objects of
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}(U+V)$
are pairs
$(U+V\xleftarrow {w}R, z\in \mathbb{X}R)$
with
$w\in \mathscr{R}$
. Since
$\mathscr{C}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive,
$R\xrightarrow {w}U+V$
is equivalent over
$U+V$
to some
$S+T\xrightarrow {u+v}U+V$
and the morphisms
$u$
and
$v$
are in
$\mathscr{R}$
. Since
$\mathbb{X}$
preserves finite biproducts,
$z\in \mathbb{X}R$
gives
$(x,y)\in \mathbb{X}S\times \mathbb{X}T$
. The assignment
$(R,z)\mapsto ((S,x), (T,y))$
is the required equivalence
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}(U+V)\simeq \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}U\times \overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}V$
. It is clear that
$\overrightarrow {\mathbb{X}}0\simeq \mathbf{1}$
since all
$0\xleftarrow {u\in \mathscr{R}}S$
are isomorphic equivalences and
$\mathbb{X}0\simeq \mathbf{1}$
.
Proposition 6.6. Suppose the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive and that the protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
is closed under the finite bicoproducts. Then
-
i the bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
admits finite bicoproducts, and -
ii each homcategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}(X,Y)$
admits finite coproducts preserved by composition on the diagrammatic right by any morphism
$Y\xrightarrow {(u,S,v)} Z$
where
$u\in \mathscr{R}$
.
Proof.
The bi-initial object of
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
is that of
$\mathscr{C}$
denoted
$0$
. For the 1-morphism part of the universal property: if
$0\xleftarrow {u}S\xrightarrow {v}Y$
is a left
$\mathscr{R}$
-span then
$u$
is an equivalence (using
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}0 \sim \mathbf{1}$
); so
$S$
is bi-initial and we conclude that all such spans are isomorphic in
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
while the 2-morphism property of
$0$
follows from that of
$0\in \mathscr{C}$
.
We will show that a bicoproduct
$U\xrightarrow {i}U+V\xleftarrow {j}V$
in
$\mathscr{C}$
gives one
$U\xrightarrow {i_*}U+V\xleftarrow {j_*}V$
in
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
. Note that coprojections
$i$
,
$j$
and codiagonals are in
$\mathscr{R}$
. Take spans
$U\xleftarrow {u}S\xrightarrow {v}W$
and
$V\xleftarrow {r}T\xrightarrow {s}W$
with
$u, r\in \mathscr{R}$
(and hence
$u+r \in \mathscr{R}$
). We obtain
$U+V\xleftarrow {u+r\in \mathscr{R}}S+T\xrightarrow {[v,s]}W$
whose composites with
$i_*$
and
$j_*$
are isomorphic to the given two spans because our assumptions give the bipullbacks

The 2-morphism part of the universal property uses
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensivity and the properties of
$\mathscr{R}$
:

The coproduct of
$X\xleftarrow {u\in \mathscr{R}}S\xrightarrow {v}Y$
and
$X\xleftarrow {u'\in \mathscr{R}}S'\xrightarrow {v'}Y$
in
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}(X,Y)$
is
$X\xleftarrow {[u,u']\in \mathscr{R}}S+S'\xrightarrow {[v,v']}Y$
. Contemplation of the diagram

(where the diamond is a bipullback) reveals the claimed right preservation property.
For any bicategory
$\mathscr{D}$
admitting finite bicoproducts, we write
$\textrm{fpCAT}\mathscr{D}$
for the full sub-bicategory of
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{D}$
consisting of the finite biproduct preserving pseudofunctors
$\mathscr{D}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
. If
$\mathscr{T}$
is a protocalibration of
$\mathscr{D}$
, we write
$\textrm{fpCAT}_{\mathscr{T}}\mathscr{D}$
for the intersection of
$\textrm{fpCAT}\mathscr{D}$
and
$\textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{T}}\mathscr{D}$
.
Proposition 6.7. Under the hypotheses of Proposition 6.6, the biequivalence of Proposition 3.1 restricts to a biequivalence
Proof.
The pseudofunctor
$(\!-\!)_* : \mathscr{C} \to \textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
preserves finite bicategorical coproduct so restriction along its opposite restricts to a pseudofunctor from left to right, which is an equivalence on homcategories. Also, if
$\mathbb{X} \in \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
preserves finite bicategorical products then so does its extension
$\mathbb{X}_{\textrm{sp}}$
to
$(\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C})^{\textrm{op}}$
since
$\mathscr{R}$
is closed under finite bicoproduct.
Example 6.8. Continuing with Example 6.3, Proposition 6.6 tells us that
$\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E} = \textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{E}}\mathscr{E}$
has bicoproducts and local coproducts preserved by right composition. However,
$\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E} = (\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}\,)^{\textrm{op}}$
, so local coproducts are preserved by composition on the left as well. Furthermore, if
$\mathscr{R}$
is any protocalibration of the lextensive category
$\mathscr{E}$
closed under finite coproducts then
$\mathscr{E}$
is
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive. The bicoproducts and local coproducts in
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
are preserved by the inclusion pseudofunctor into
$\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}$
. It follows that the local coproducts in
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
are preserved by composition on both sides. Consider the symmetric closed monoidal bicategory
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
of categories with finite coproducts and finite-coproduct-preserving functors; the internal hom
$[\mathscr{A},\mathscr{B}]_{+}$
of
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
is
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}(\mathscr{A},\mathscr{B})$
with pointwise coproduct and the unit object is the category
$\textrm{set}$
of finite sets. Cartesian product
$A\times B$
of categories is a direct sum in
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
and the terminal category
$\mathbf{1}$
is also initial. What we have is that
$\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}$
is
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
-enriched and to say a pseudofunctor
$(\textrm{Spn}\mathscr{E}\,)^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}_{+}$
is biproduct preserving is to say it is
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
-enriched.
Lemma 6.9. Suppose
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
is a compatible pair of protocalibrations on an
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive category
$\mathscr{E}$
. Suppose both
$\mathscr{L}$
and
$\mathscr{R}$
are closed under finite coproducts in
$\mathscr{E}$
. The protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}_*$
of the bicategory
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}$
(see Lemma 4.3) is closed under bicoproducts and
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}$
is
$\mathscr{R}_*$
-extensive.
Proof.
For this proof, put
$\mathscr{C} = _{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}$
. The injections into a bicoproduct and the codiagonals are in
$\mathscr{R}_*$
. The bicoproduct of
$f_*$
and
$f'_*$
is isomorphic to
$(f+f')_*$
and so in
$\mathscr{R}_*$
. It remains to prove
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}_*}$
preserves biproducts. Up to equivalence, we can take the objects of
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}_*}U$
to be morphisms
$X\xrightarrow {a}U$
in
$\mathscr{R}$
since every morphism
$X\to U$
in
$\mathscr{R}_*$
is isomorphic to some
$X\xrightarrow {a_*}U$
with
$a\in \mathscr{R}$
. Moreover, every morphism

in
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}_*}U$
has a morphism of the form
$f_*$
in the isomorphism class
$[u,S,v]$
. Thus we have an equivalence of categories
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}_*}U\simeq \mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}}U$
.Footnote
3
Also, the canonical functor
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}_*}(U+V)\to \mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}_*}U \times \mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}_*}V$
transports across the equivalences to the lextensivity equivalence
$\mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}}(U+V) \simeq \mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}}U\times \mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}}V$
.
As a corollary of Theorem 5.1, Proposition 6.6 and Lemma 6.9, we obtain:
Theorem 6.10. Under the hypotheses of Lemma 6.9, the bicategory
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Ply}_{\mathscr{R}}}\mathscr{E}$
admits finite biproducts and its homs admit finite coproducts preserved by composition on the diagrammatic left.
7. Objective Mackey Functors
Suppose the bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
is finitely bicocomplete and
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive for a protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
which, when regarded as a wide sub-bicategory of
$\mathscr{C}$
, is closed under finite bicoproducts.
Definition 7.1. An objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functor on
$\mathscr{C}$
is an
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{M} : \mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}} \to \textrm{Cat}$
which preserves finite biproducts (in the bicategorical sense). We define the bicategory of objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functors by
$\textrm{OMky}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C} = \textrm{fpCAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
. By Proposition 6.7,
When
$\mathscr{R} = \mathscr{C}$
, we drop the subscripts
$\mathscr{C}$
and refer to objective Mackey functors.
Example 7.2. In the terminology of Definition 2.2, the object
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}} \in \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
is an objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functor and, as suggested by the case
$\mathscr{C} = \textrm{set}^G$
of finite sets acted on by a finite group
$G$
, is called the objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Burnside functor.
Example 7.3. In the terminology of Proposition 1.8, if
$\mathbb{Z}$
is an objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functor, so is
$[\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}]_{\mathscr{R}}$
. For, we have
\begin{eqnarray*} [\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}]_{\mathscr{R}}(W+W') & \simeq & \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}(\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}(\!-\times (W+W')) \\ & \simeq & \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}(\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}(\!-\times W)\times \mathbb{Z}(\!-\times W')) \\ & \simeq & \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}(\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}(\!-\times W)) \times \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}(\mathbb{Y}, \mathbb{Z}(\!-\times W')) \\ & \simeq & [\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}]_{\mathscr{R}}W\times [\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}]_{\mathscr{R}}W'. \end{eqnarray*}
(We are using the last sentence of Corollary 2.7 in the third step.)
As in Example 6.8, we consider the symmetric closed monoidal bicategory
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
of categories with finite coproducts and finite-coproduct-preserving functors; the internal hom
$[\mathscr{A},\mathscr{B}]_{+}$
of
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
is
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}(\mathscr{A},\mathscr{B})$
with pointwise coproduct. Cartesian product
$A\times B$
of categories is a direct sum in
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
and the terminal category
$\mathbf{1}$
is also initial.
Proposition 7.4. Every objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functor
$\mathbb{M} : \mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}} \to \textrm{Cat}$
factors through the forgetful 2-functor
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}\to \textrm{Cat}$
by a pseudofunctor also denoted by
$\mathbb{M}$
.
Proof.
By assumption, the codiagonal
$\nabla : U+U\to U$
and unique
$! : 0\to U$
are in
$\mathscr{R}$
. The diagonal of
$\mathbb{M}U$
is isomorphic to the composite
and so has a left adjoint by Proposition 1.4. Thus,
$\mathbb{M}U$
has binary coproducts. Similarly,
$\mathbb{M}U \xrightarrow {\mathbb{M}!} \mathbb{M}0\simeq \mathbf{1}$
has a left adjoint so
$\mathbb{M}U$
has an initial object. For
$f : U\to V$
, the functor
$\mathbb{M}f$
preserves these finite coproducts as can be seen by applying the CB property to the pullbacks

in our
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensive bicategory
$\mathscr{C}$
.
Remark 7.5. The referee pointed out that Proposition 7.4 implies certain examples of symmetric monoidal Mackey functors in the sense of Hill et al. (Reference Hill, Hopkins and Ravenel2016) are not objective Mackey functors. These examples include norm functors which do not preserve coproduct. Initially, I did expect these examples to be symmetric monoidales somewhere.
Corollary 7.6. If
$\mathbb{M}$
is an objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functor and
$U\xrightarrow {i} U+V\xleftarrow {j}V$
is a coproduct in
$\mathscr{C}$
then

exhibits a (bicategorical) direct sum in
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
.
Corollary 7.7. For all
$f : X'\to X$
in
$\mathscr{C}$
, the functor
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}f : \mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}X \to \mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}X'$
preserves finite coproducts and the pseudofunctor
factors through the inclusion
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}\hookrightarrow \textrm{Cat}$
of the sub-2-category of categories with finite coproducts and functors which preserve them.
Remark 7.8. Example 6.8 told of a hom enrichment of
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
in
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
in the ordinary sense. For
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
, we have an example of enrichment in a skew base which is an objective version of a base observed in 2012 by Cockett and Lack in connection with left additive (= left linear over the ring of integers) categories; see page 1101 of Garner and Lemay (Reference Garner and Lemay2021). What we notice is that the sub-2-category
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
of
$\textrm{Cat}$
has a skew-closed structure (see Street Reference Street2013) with internal hom of
$A,B\in \textrm{Cat}_{+}$
taken as the ordinary functor category
$[\mathscr{A},\mathscr{B}]$
where the finite coproducts are pointwise; write
$\textrm{Cat}_{+ \textrm{sk}}$
for
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
equipped with this skew-monoidal structure. Then Proposition 6.6 and Corollary 7.7 tell us that
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
is a skew
$\textrm{Cat}_{+ \textrm{sk}}$
-enrichment of
$\mathscr{C}$
in the sense of Campbell (Reference Campbell2018) where the enriched hom is
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}(X,Y)$
.
In particular, from Theorem 6.10, we have that
$_{\mathscr{L}}\textrm{Ply}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
is a skew enrichment of
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{Spn}}{}\mathscr{E}$
in
$\textrm{Cat}_{+ \textrm{sk}}$
.
We end this section with a consequence of Proposition 6.5.
Proposition 7.9. The
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocompletion pseudomonad
$\overrightarrow {(\!-\!)}$
on
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}$
restricts to a pseudomonad on the bicategory
$\textrm{fpCAT}\mathscr{C}$
of finite biproduct preserving pseudofunctors
$\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
. The Eilenberg-Moore pseudo-algebras are the objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functors.
8. A Monoidal Structure on
$\textrm{OMky}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
The construction
$[\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}]_{\mathscr{R}}$
defined and discussed in Proposition 1.8 and Example 7.3 provides a closed structure (in the sense of Day and Street Reference Day and Street1997) on the bicategory
$\textrm{OMky}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
. The closed structure is symmetric monoidal: there is a symmetric tensor product
$\mathbb{M}\star \mathbb{N}$
defined by a pseudonatural equivalence
There is a bicategorically universal pseudonatural transformation
which is
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocontinuous in each variable separately. The unit for this tensor product is the objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Burnside functor
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}$
(see Example (7.2)); for
\begin{eqnarray*} [\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}},\mathbb{L}]_{\mathscr{R}} & = & \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}(\overrightarrow {\mathbf{1}},\mathbb{L}(\!-\times W)) \\ & \simeq & \textrm{CAT}\mathscr{C}(\mathbf{1},\mathbb{L}(\!-\times W)) \\ & \simeq & \textrm{lim} \ \mathbb{L}(\!-\times W) \\ & \simeq & \mathbb{L}(\mathbf{1}\times W) \\ & \simeq & \mathbb{L}W \end{eqnarray*}
where the (bicategorical) limit is over the category
$\mathscr{C}^{\textrm{op}}$
which has the (bicategorical) initial object
$\mathbf{1}$
.
Remark 8.1. The referee reminds us that, for ordinary abelian-group-valued
$G$
-Mackey functors the
$\star$
tensor product is often called the box product and
$\omega _{\mathbb{M},\mathbb{N}}$
is called a Dress pairing.
The monoidales (pseudomonoids) for the convolution monoidal structure
$\mathbb{A}\star \mathbb{B}$
we call objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Green functors on
$\mathscr{C}$
and write
$\textrm{OGrn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
for the bicategory they, with the strong monoidal morphisms, form. An objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Green functor is symmetric when it is symmetric as a monoidale.
The tensor unit for a symmetric monoidal structure is always a symmetric monoidale. So the objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Burnside functor
$\mathbb{C}_{\mathscr{R}}$
is an example of an objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Green functor.
Let us now describe the symmetric monoidal structure obtained by transporting the one on
$\textrm{OMky}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
across the biequivalence (7.29).
By Lemma 1.6, we see that finite product in
$\mathscr{C}$
supplies the bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
with a symmetric monoidal structure. Using Proposition 7.4, we see that the bicategory
$\textrm{fpCATSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
is the
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
-enriched bicategory
$\textrm{Ps}((\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C})^{\textrm{op}}, \textrm{Cat}_{+})_{+}$
of such
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
-enriched pseudofunctors. The desired transported symmetric closed monoidal structure
$\mathbb{A}\star \mathbb{B}$
on
$\textrm{fpCATSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{C}$
is the Day convolution structure with internal hom
$[\mathbb{B},\mathbb{D}]$
defined by
9. An Objective Mackey Functor of Mackey Functors
Take a lextensive category
$\mathscr{E}$
equipped with a protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}$
closed under finite coproducts. We will consider the bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
in the notation of Section 3 and will write
$\textrm{clSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
for the classifying category of
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
; the morphisms are isomorphism classes of spans (see Bénabou Reference Blumberg and Hill1967). We write
$\textrm{Spn}{\mathscr{E}}$
and
$\textrm{clSpn}{\mathscr{E}}$
for
$\textrm{clSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
and
$\textrm{clSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
in the case where
$\mathscr{R} = \mathscr{E}$
.
As we have pointed out, the bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
is enriched in the closed symmetric monoidal bicategory
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
of categories with finite coproducts and finite-coproduct-preserving functors. The symmetric monoidal structure on the bicategory
$\textrm{Spn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
is
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
-enriched. The more abstract category
$\textrm{clSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}}$
, along with its symmetric monoidal structure, is enriched in the usual symmetric closed monoidal category
$\textrm{CMon}$
of commutative monoids.
An
$\mathscr{R}$
-Mackey functor on
$\mathscr{E}$
is a
$\textrm{CMon}$
-enriched (or equally, a finite-product-preserving) functor
This is consistent with Lindner (Reference Lindner1976) who looked at the case
$\mathscr{R}=\mathscr{E}$
.
Example 9.1.
-
i. Let
$G$
be a finite group, let
$\mathscr{E} = [G,\textrm{set}]$
be the category of finite
$G$
-sets, and let
$R : G \to \textrm{vect}$
be a finite-dimensional representation of
$G$
. Define
$M : \textrm{clSpn}{\mathscr{E}}\to \textrm{CMon}$
by
$MX = \textrm{Set}^G(X,R)$
and, for
$\tau : X\to R$
and
$y\in Y$
,
\begin{equation*}M(X\xrightarrow {[u,S,v]}Y)(X\xrightarrow {\tau } R)(y) = \sum _{v(s) =y}{\tau (u(s))}.\end{equation*}
-
ii. There is the Burnside functor
$E_{\mathscr{R}} : (\textrm{clSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}})^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{CMon}$
whereis the set of isomorphism classes of the slice category
\begin{equation*}E(X) = (\textrm{clSpn}_{\mathscr{R}}{\mathscr{E}})(X,1) = \mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}}(X)_{\cong }\end{equation*}
$\mathscr{E}_{/X}$
made into a commutative monoid with addition induced by coproduct.
Put
the
$\textrm{CMon}$
-enriched functor category. It is a monoidal
$\textrm{CMon}$
-enriched category by Day convolution (Day Reference Day1970). The monoids for this convolution structure are
$\mathscr{R}$
-Green functors on
$\mathscr{E}$
; see Panchadcharam and Street (Reference Panchadcharam and Street2007) for more details in the case
$\mathscr{R} = \mathscr{E}$
. We write
$\textrm{Grn}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
for the
$\textrm{CMon}$
-enriched category of Green functors. The Burnside functor
$E_{\mathscr{R}}$
is an example.
Let
$\textrm{RLxt}$
denote the 2-category whose objects are pairs
$(\mathscr{A} , \mathscr{O})$
consisting of a lextensive category
$\mathscr{A}$
and a protocalibration
$\mathscr{O}$
closed under finite coproducts, and, whose morphisms
$F : (\mathscr{A} , \mathscr{O})\to (\mathscr{A}' , \mathscr{O}')$
are functors
$F : \mathscr{A}\to \mathscr{A}'$
preserving pullback and finite coproducts, and taking
$\mathscr{O}$
to
$\mathscr{O}'$
. Then we have a pseudofunctor
taking
$(\mathscr{A} , \mathscr{O})$
to
$\textrm{Mky}_{\mathscr{O}}\mathscr{A}$
regarded as a category with finite coproducts.
It is useful to notice that the objective Burnside functor
$\mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}} : \mathscr{E}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}_+$
lands in the category
$\textrm{RLxt}$
over
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
by equipping each lextensive category
$\mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}}(X) (\subseteq \mathscr{E}_{/X})$
with the protocalibration
$\mathscr{R}_{/X}$
.
Proposition 9.2. The composite pseudofunctor
becomes a symmetric objective
$\mathscr{R}$
-Green functor when equipped with the multiplication induced by the finite-coproduct-preserving-in-each-variable functors
taking
$(M,N)$
to
$M\boxtimes N$
where
Remark 9.3. In much of what we have just said the values of an objective Mackey functor could land in any bicategory
$\mathscr{K}$
with homs enriched in
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
rather than in
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
itself. That is, we can define a
$\mathscr{K}$
-valued objective Mackey functor on
$\mathscr{E}$
to be an
$\mathscr{R}$
-cocomplete
$\textrm{Cat}_{+}$
-enriched pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{M} : \mathscr{E}^{\textrm{op}}\to \mathscr{K}$
. We write
$\textrm{OMky}_{\mathscr{R}}(\mathscr{E},\mathscr{K})$
for the bicategory of these. For the convolution tensor product to exist on this bicategory, we require
$\mathscr{K}$
to be appropriately cocomplete. We could do a similar thing in the abstract case by replacing
$\textrm{CMon}$
by a general
$\textrm{CMon}$
-enriched category with finite coproducts.
10. Objective Tambara Functors
Suppose
$\mathscr{E}$
is finitely complete and the pair
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
satisfies the hypotheses of Lemma 6.9.
Definition 10.1. An objective
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
-Tambara functor on
$\mathscr{E}$
is a finite biproduct preserving pseudofunctor
$\mathbb{T} : \mathscr{E}^{\textrm{op}} \to \textrm{Cat}$
which is in
$_{\mathscr{L}}{\textrm{CAT}}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
. We define the bicategory of objective
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
-Tambara functors by
By Proposition 6.7 and Theorem 5.1,
We write
$\mathbb{T}_{\textrm{pl}} : \textrm{Ply}\mathscr{E} \to \textrm{Cat}$
for the inverse image of
$\mathbb{T}$
under this biequivalence.
Example 10.2. If
$\mathbb{Z}$
is a
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
-Tambara functor then so is
$[\mathbb{Y},\mathbb{Z}]_{\mathscr{R}}$
for all
$\mathbb{Y}\in \textrm{CAT}_{\mathscr{R}}\mathscr{E}$
.
Example 10.3. Take
$\mathscr{E}$
to be a cartesian closed category
$\textrm{cat}$
of small categories and functors. Let
$\mathscr{X}$
be a complete and cocomplete category. Then
$\textrm{Cat}(\!-,\mathscr{X}) : \textrm{cat}^{\textrm{op}} \to \textrm{Cat}$
is a
$(\mathscr{P},\mathscr{E}\,)$
-Tambara functor.
Lemma 10.4.
$\mathscr{E}$
is
$\mathscr{L}$
-extensive.
Proof.
The inclusion
$\mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{L}}\to \mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{R}}$
is componentwise fully faithful and the
$\mathscr{R}$
-extensivity equivalences restrict to
$\mathbb{E}_{\mathscr{L}}$
.
Therefore, Proposition 6.5 applies to both
$\mathscr{R}$
and
$\mathscr{L}$
yielding:
Corollary 10.5. If
$\mathbb{X}\in \textrm{CAT}$
preserves biproducts then so do
$\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}$
and
$\overrightarrow {\overleftarrow {\mathbb{X}}}$
.
Proposition 10.6. The composite pseudomonad
$\overrightarrow {\overleftarrow {(\!-\!)}}$
on
$\textrm{CAT}\mathscr{E}$
(see Section 4) restricts to a pseudomonad on the bicategory
$\textrm{fpCAT}\mathscr{E}$
of finite-product-preserving pseudofunctors
$\mathscr{E}^{\textrm{op}}\to \textrm{Cat}$
. The pseudo-algebras are the objective
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
-Tambara functors.
An
$(\mathscr{L},\mathscr{R})$
-Tambara functor on
$\mathscr{E}$
is a finite-product-preserving functor
This concept, for the case
$\mathscr{L}=\mathscr{R}=\mathscr{E}= G\text{-}\textrm{set}$
, arose in the paper by Tambara (Reference Tambara1993); also see Chan (Reference Chan2024), Hoyer (Reference Hoyer2014), and Mazur (Reference Mazur2013) for a version of
$\mathscr{L}$
and
$\mathscr{R}$
.
Competing interests
The author declares none.




