For concrete categories, the diagonal morphism can be simply described by its action on elements of the object . Namely, , the ordered pair formed from . The reason for the name is that the image of such a diagonal morphism is diagonal (whenever it makes sense), for example the image of the diagonal morphism on the real line is given by the line that is the graph of the equation . The diagonal morphism into the infinite product may provide an injection into the space of sequences valued in ; each element maps to the constant sequence at that element. However, most notions of sequence spaces have convergence restrictions that the image of the diagonal map will fail to satisfy.
The dual notion of a diagonal morphism is a co-diagonal morphism. For every object in a category where the coproducts exists, the co-diagonal[3][2][7][5][6] is the canonical morphism
satisfying
for
where is the injection morphism to the -th component.
Let be a morphism in a category with the pushout is an epimorphism if and only if the codiagonal is an isomorphism.[8]
Awodey, s. (1996). "Structure in Mathematics and Logic: A Categorical Perspective". Philosophia Mathematica. 4 (3): 209–237. doi:10.1093/philmat/4.3.209.