$\DeclareMathOperator{\im}{im} \DeclareMathOperator{\coker}{coker} \require{AMScd}$ The usual formulation of the Strong Four Lemma is: given the diagram below, if the rows are exact, $\alpha$ is epic, and $\delta$ is monic, then $g(\ker \beta) = \ker \gamma$ and $\im \beta = g'^{-1}(\im \gamma)$: \begin{CD} A @>{f}>> B @>{g}>> C @>{h}>> D \\ @VV{\alpha}V @VV{\beta}V @VV{\gamma}V @VV{\delta}V \\ A' @>{f'}>> B' @>{g'}>> C' @>{h'}>> D' \\ \end{CD}
This is equivalent to saying that the induced maps $\ker \beta \to \ker \gamma$ and $\coker \beta \to \coker \gamma$ are epic and monic, respectively.
Upon drawing the kernels and cokernels of the sequences, it seems like this could be interpreted as a consequence of the Snake Lemma. \begin{CD} @. \ker \beta @>>> \ker \gamma @>>> 0 @. \textrm{(complex)} \\ @.@VVV @VVV @VVV \\ A @>{f}>> B @>{g}>> C @>{h}>> D @. \textrm{(exact)} \\ @VV{\alpha}V @VV{\beta}V @VV{\gamma}V @VV{\delta}V \\ A' @>{f'}>> B' @>{g'}>> C' @>{h'}>> D' @. \textrm{(exact)} \\ @VVV @VVV @VVV @. \\ 0 @>>> \coker \beta @>>> \coker \gamma @. @. \textrm{(complex)} \\ \end{CD}
Is this intuition misguided, or have I simply not found the right arrows?
Some thoughts:
- The element-chasing proof dances through all eight objects, so I suspect the diagrammatic proof must use them all as well. So it's not just a result of some "smaller" lemma, like the left-exactness of kernels.
- I could replace $A'$ with $A$, and $D$ with $D'$, without changing the exactness of the rows. Maybe this makes things clearer, maybe it doesn't.
This lemma is all about the central square $(g, g', \beta, \gamma)$. The functions $f$ and $h$ really don't seem to matter very much; it's not hard to cook up $f$ and $h$ making the sequence exact. But this result isn't true for an arbitrary commutative square, so they must play some important role, though it's not obvious what it is.- EDIT: This theorem is equivalent to the special case where $A = \ker g$, $A' = \ker g'$, $D = \coker g$, and $D' = \coker g'$. This explains why I had trouble figuring out the significance of $f$ and $h$ earlier.