I'd like to get some examples of monads; specifically, I'd love a big list of different monads and a description of what their algebras are. Alternatively, online resources and especially exercices on monads and their algebras.
A recent question I asked (that hasn't received any answers yet), has sent me on an epic voyage of discovery through the world of lattices, monads, operads, lattice and poset homology. I'm a bit lost but very much enjoying the ride ^^
Anyway, I know that a pair of adjoint functors produce a monad, and conversely, it is my understanding that, given a monad, one can construct a new category and a pair of adjoint functors that will produce the original monad, so in a way the question is settled. However this is not very concrete to me.
Here are some monads encountered in various lecture notes (and the youtube video series by the Catsters)
- the monad on $\mathsf{Set}$ that associates to every set the set on words on it; its algebras are the monoids. Similarly there is the monad on $\mathsf{Set}$ that associates to every set the set underlying the free group on it; I guess the algebras associated to this one are the groups(?), or the monad on $\mathsf{Vect}_k$ that takes a vector space $V$ to the vector space underlying its tensor algebra: what are its algebras? These arise from classical adjuctions.
- the powerset monad. I've tried working out its algebras but I don't have a clue as to what they might be. An algebra would be a set $X$ and a map $\theta:\mathcal{P}(X)\rightarrow X$ such that for any $x\in X$ and family $(A_i:i\in I)$ of distinct subsets of $X$, $$\theta(\lbrace x\rbrace)=x\text{ and }\theta\left(\bigcup_{i\in I} A_i\right)=\theta\left(\lbrace \theta(A_i)\mid i\in I\rbrace\right)$$ However, I don't see what that actually means. EDIT I found a chapter of Mac Lane's Categories for the Working Mathematician online that features an exercise showing that the algebras for the powerset monad are the complete join semi-lattices.
- the intriguing ultrafilter monad on $\mathsf{Set}$ that sends a set $X$ to the set $\mathcal{U}X$ of all ultrafilters on $X$. According to Steve Lack's answer to this MO question, its "algberas are compact Hausdorff spaces". I read a short explanation somewhere on the net, but I haven't yet tried to grasp it, nor do I remember where it was...