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I am looking for a reference for the following result (or any subresult) in any book or notes:

Lemma. Let $F:\mathcal{A}\to\mathcal{B}$ be an exact functor between abelian categories. The following are equivalent:

  1. $F$ reflects exact sequences, i.e., for every sequence $A\to B\to C$ in $\mathcal{A}$ such that $F(A)\to F(B)\to F(C)$ is exact, also $A\to B\to C$ is exact,
  2. For every complex $A\to B\to C$ in $\mathcal{A}$ such that $F(A)\to F(B)\to F(C)$ is exact, also $A\to B\to C$ is exact,
  3. $F$ reflects short exact sequences, i.e., for every sequence $A\to B\to C$ in $\mathcal{A}$ such that $0\to F(A)\to F(B)\to F(C)\to 0$ is exact, also $0\to A\to B\to C\to 0$ is exact,
  4. For every complex $A\to B\to C$ in $\mathcal{A}$ such that $0\to F(A)\to F(B)\to F(C)\to 0$ is exact, also $0\to A\to B\to C\to 0$ is exact,
  5. $F$ reflects zero objects (i.e., $\operatorname{Ker}F=0$),
  6. $F$ reflects zero morphisms,
  7. $F$ is faithful,
  8. $F$ reflects monomorphisms and epimorphisms, and
  9. $F$ reflects isomorphisms (i.e., $F$ is conservative).

The name I know for such a functor is a faithfully exact functor, but I don't know any books or sources to look for and Google doesn't help. (It's not that I don't know how to prove the result, because I do, but rather that I want to cite it and I'm unable to find it anywhere). The most similar thing I found is T. Ishikawa, Faithfully exact functors and their applications to projective modules and injective modules, Theorem 1.1. However, this result is stated only for modules over a ring (one could leverage Mitchell's embedding, but still, there must be an easy direct proof in the literature), and properties 2, 3, 4, 8, and 9 from the lemma above are missing in Ishikawa's Theorem 1.1

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    $\begingroup$ I have been looking for a reference, without any success. I checked Cartan-Eilenberg, Weibel, Freyd's book, and Kashiwara-Schapira. I would encourage you to just write up your own proof and include it as an appendix to your paper. That would be a real service, given how hard it is to find a reference for the result. Also, the following is relevant: math.stackexchange.com/questions/271373/… $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 22 at 16:51
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    $\begingroup$ I also checked Buhler's survey on exact categories, Barr's survey, Jack Kelly's recent writings, the stacks project, and [the rising sea][math.stanford.edu/~vakil/216blog/FOAGnov1817public.pdf]. Also, the following is relevant to you: math.stackexchange.com/questions/2179003/… $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 22 at 17:08
  • $\begingroup$ I also checked Maclane's book Homology. No luck. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 22 at 17:36
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    $\begingroup$ These are also equivalent to the condition that $F$ reflects epimorphisms, right? I thought it implies 2. as follows. Since $A\to B\to C$ is a complex, we have a monomorphism $Im(A\to B)\to Ker(B\to C)$ in $B$. Carrying these by the exact $F$, we get a monomorphism $Im (F(A)\to F(B))\to Ker(F(B)\to F(C))$, which by the assumption is an isomorphism. Since $F$ reflects epimorphisms, $Im(A\to B)\to Ker(B\to C)$ is also epi, showing the desired exactness. $\endgroup$
    – neander
    Commented Jul 24 at 8:10

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I found a reference that proves some of the subresults in the question. I also left two comments below the question about places I searched that did NOT contain this result. The reference I found was K. Shimizu. On unimodular finite tensor categories. Int Math Res Notices (2016). Of course, this result was known much earlier but it's hard to find a reference.

Lemma 5.1 in the arxiv version covers your (5), (7), and (9). I think the result numbering might be different between the arxiv version and the published version.

Another good reference is Mitchell's book Theory of Categories. Theorem II.7.1, which he credits to Freyd, shows that (7) implies (8), (6), and (1)-(4). In Proposition II.7.2, he proves that (5) implies (7). In Exercise 9 on page 77 he proves that (1) implies (7).

I am sorry I couldn't find a reference with all the pieces you asked for. I'm amazed that none of the standard references had this result. I encourage you to write up a proof and include it as an appendix to your next paper. That would do a service to the field and also probably give you lots of citations, as is happening with Shimizu.

EDIT: This thread motivated me to ask a question about how to find Freyd's thesis. And, that quickly revealed the thesis. Freyd calls functors that satisfy (6) "embeddings" and his Theorem 9 proves (6) and (1) are equivalent. His Proposition 12 proves (5) is equivalent to those two as well.

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    $\begingroup$ Thank you very much for all the research effort you put into this! I actually have my unpolished proof written in my github fork of the Stacks Project, I was waiting until A. Johan de Jong came back to (github) life so I could pull-request it. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 23 at 10:24

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