In mathematics, specifically in category theory, Day convolution is an operation on functors that can be seen as a categorified version of function convolution.  It was first introduced by Brian Day in 1970[1] in the general context of enriched functor categories. 
Day convolution gives a symmetric monoidal structure on  for two symmetric monoidal categories
 for two symmetric monoidal categories  .
.
Another related version is that Day convolution acts as a tensor product for a monoidal category structure on the category of functors ![{\displaystyle [\mathbf {C} ,V]}](./_assets_/5cefe6959c0bae6a141dc8ba8444b96548c91fcd.svg) over some monoidal category
 over some monoidal category  .
.
Definition
First version
Given  for two symmetric monoidal
 for two symmetric monoidal  , we define their Day convolution as follows.
, we define their Day convolution as follows.
It is the left kan extension along  of the composition
 of the composition  
Thus evaluated on an object  , intuitively we get a colimit in
, intuitively we get a colimit in  of
 of  along approximations of
 along approximations of  as a pure tensor
 as a pure tensor  
Left kan extensions are computed via coends, which leads to the version below.
Enriched version
Let  be a monoidal category enriched over a symmetric monoidal closed category
 be a monoidal category enriched over a symmetric monoidal closed category  . Given two functors
. Given two functors  , we define their Day convolution as the following coend.[2]
, we define their Day convolution as the following coend.[2]
 
If  is symmetric, then
 is symmetric, then  is also symmetric. We can show this defines an associative monoidal product:
 is also symmetric. We can show this defines an associative monoidal product:
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}&(F\otimes _{d}G)\otimes _{d}H\\[5pt]\cong {}&\int ^{c_{1},c_{2}}(F\otimes _{d}G)c_{1}\otimes Hc_{2}\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{1}\otimes _{c}c_{2},-)\\[5pt]\cong {}&\int ^{c_{1},c_{2}}\left(\int ^{c_{3},c_{4}}Fc_{3}\otimes Gc_{4}\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{3}\otimes _{c}c_{4},c_{1})\right)\otimes Hc_{2}\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{1}\otimes _{c}c_{2},-)\\[5pt]\cong {}&\int ^{c_{1},c_{2},c_{3},c_{4}}Fc_{3}\otimes Gc_{4}\otimes Hc_{2}\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{3}\otimes _{c}c_{4},c_{1})\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{1}\otimes _{c}c_{2},-)\\[5pt]\cong {}&\int ^{c_{1},c_{2},c_{3},c_{4}}Fc_{3}\otimes Gc_{4}\otimes Hc_{2}\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{3}\otimes _{c}c_{4}\otimes _{c}c_{2},-)\\[5pt]\cong {}&\int ^{c_{1},c_{2},c_{3},c_{4}}Fc_{3}\otimes Gc_{4}\otimes Hc_{2}\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{2}\otimes _{c}c_{4},c_{1})\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{3}\otimes _{c}c_{1},-)\\[5pt]\cong {}&\int ^{c_{1},c_{3}}Fc_{3}\otimes (G\otimes _{d}H)c_{1}\otimes \mathbf {C} (c_{3}\otimes _{c}c_{1},-)\\[5pt]\cong {}&F\otimes _{d}(G\otimes _{d}H)\end{aligned}}}](./_assets_/5539d6a3ddbe543a5a1691cc60953d17a5765282.svg) 
References
External links