Mapping
single-valued
A law according to which to every element of a given set has been assigned a completely defined element of another given set
(
may coincide with
). Such a relation between the elements
and
is denoted in the form
,
or
. One also writes
and says that the mapping
operates from
into
. The set
is called the domain (of definition) of the mapping, while the set
is called the range (of values) of the mapping. The mapping
is also called a mapping of the set
into the set
(or onto the set
if
). Logically, the concept of a "mapping" coincides with the concept of a function, an operator or a transformation.
A mapping gives rise to a set
, which is called the graph of the mapping. On the other hand, a set
defines a single-valued mapping
having graph
if and only if for all
one and only one
exists such that
; and then
.
Two mappings and
are said to be equal if their domains of definition coincide and if
for each
. In this case the ranges of these mappings also coincide. A mapping
defined on
is constant if there is an
such that
for every
. The mapping
defined on a subset
of
by the equality
,
, is called the restriction of the mapping
to
; this restriction is often denoted by
. A mapping
defined on a set
and satisfying the equality
for all
is called an extension (or continuation) of the mapping to
. If three sets
are given, if a mapping
with values in
is defined on
, and a mapping
with values in
is defined on
, then there exists a mapping
with domain of definition
, taking values in
, and defined by the equality
. This mapping is called the composite of the mappings
and
, while
and
are called component (factor) mappings. The mapping
is also called the compound mapping (composite mapping, composed mapping), consisting of the interior mapping
and the exterior mapping
. The composed mapping is denoted by
, where the order of the notation is vital (for functions of a real variable, the term superposition is also used). The concept of a compound mapping can be generalized to any finite number of components of the mapping.
A mapping , defined on
and taking values in
, gives rise to a new mapping defined on the subsets of
and taking subsets of
as values. In fact, if
, then
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The set is called the image of
. If
, the initial mapping
is obtained; thus,
is an extension of
from the set
to the set
of all subsets of
if a one-element set is identified with the element comprising it. When
, a set
is called an invariant subset for
if
, while a point
is called a fixed point for
if
. Invariant sets and fixed points are important in solving functional equations of the form
or
.
Every mapping gives rise to a mapping defined on the subsets of the set
or
and taking subsets of the set
as values. In fact, for every
(or
), the set
is denoted by
, and is called the complete inverse image (complete pre-image) of
. If
for each
consists of a single element, then
is a mapping of elements, is defined on
, and takes values in
. It is also called the inverse mapping for
. The existence of an inverse mapping is equivalent to the solvability of the equation
,
, for a unique
when
is given.
If the sets and
have certain properties, then interesting classes can be distinguished in the set
of all mappings from
into
. Thus, for partially ordered sets
and
, the mapping
is isotone if
implies
(cf. Isotone mapping). For complex planes
and
, the class of holomorphic mappings is naturally selected. For topological spaces
and
, the class of continuous mappings between these spaces is distinguished naturally; an extended theory of differentiation of mappings (cf. Differentiation of a mapping) has been constructed. For mappings of a scalar argument and, in the most general case, for mappings defined on a measure space, the concept of (weak or strong) measurability can be introduced, and various Lebesgue-type integrals can be constructed (for example, the Bochner integral and the Daniell integral).
A mapping is called a multi-valued mapping if subsets consisting of more than one element are assigned to certain values of
. Examples of this type of mappings include multi-sheeted functions of a complex variable, multi-valued mappings of topological spaces, and others.
References
[1] | N. Bourbaki, "Elements of mathematics. Theory of sets" , Addison-Wesley (1968) (Translated from French) |
[2] | N. Bourbaki, "Elements of mathematics. General topology" , Addison-Wesley (1966) (Translated from French) |
[3] | J.L. Kelley, "General topology" , Springer (1975) |
Comments
For a mapping , the set
is also called the source of
, while
is also called the target of
, [a3].
References
[a1] | P.R. Halmos, "Measure theory" , v. Nostrand (1950) |
[a2] | P.R. Halmos, "Naive set theory" , v. Nostrand (1961) |
[a3] | P.M. Cohn, "Universal algebra" , Reidel (1981) |
Mapping. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Mapping&oldid=15615