The exclamation mark is often pronounced "shriek" (slang for exclamation mark), and the maps called "f shriek" or "f lower shriek" and "f upper shriek"—see also shriek map.
The functors are adjoint to each other as depicted at the right, where, as usual, means that F is left adjoint to G (equivalently G right adjoint to F), i.e.
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 and for on Y and on X, respectively. However, these are almost never isomorphisms—see the localization example below.
Verdier duality
Verdier duality gives another link between them: morally speaking, it exchanges "∗" and "!", i.e. in the synopsis above it exchanges functors along the diagonals. For example the direct image is dual to the direct image with compact support. This phenomenon is studied and used in the theory of perverse sheaves.
Base Change
Another useful property of the image functors is base change. Given continuous maps and , which induce morphisms and , there exists a canonical isomorphism .