The functors are
adjoint to each other as depicted at the right, where, as usual, F \leftrightarrows G means that
F is left adjoint to
G (equivalently
G right adjoint to
F), i.e. :
Hom(
F(
A),
B) ≅ Hom(
A,
G(
B)) for any two objects
A,
B in the two categories being adjoint by
F and
G. For example,
f∗ is the left adjoint of
f*. By the standard reasoning with adjointness relations, there are natural unit and counit morphisms \mathcal{G} \rightarrow f_*f^{*}\mathcal{G} and f^{*}f_*\mathcal{F} \rightarrow \mathcal{F} for \mathcal G on
Y and \mathcal F on
X, respectively. However, these are
almost never isomorphisms—see the localization example below. ==Verdier duality==