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Difference between revisions of "Equivalence relation"

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2) [[Symmetry (of a relation)|Symmetry]]: for all , if (x,y)\in R then (y,x)\in R;  
 
2) [[Symmetry (of a relation)|Symmetry]]: for all x,y\in X, if (x,y)\in R then (y,x)\in R;  
  
3) [[Transitivity]]: for all x,y,z \in X, if (x,y)\in R and  (y,z)\in R then (x,z)\in R.
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3) [[Transitive relation|Transitivity]]: for all x,y,z \in X, if (x,y)\in R and  (y,z)\in R then (x,z)\in R.
  
 
When (x,y)\in R we say that x is equivalent to y.
 
When (x,y)\in R we say that x is equivalent to y.

Revision as of 12:31, 6 February 2021

2020 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary: 03E [MSN][ZBL]

Let X be a set. An equivalence relation on X is a subset R\subseteq X\times X that satisfies the following three properties:

1) Reflexivity: for all x\in X, (x,x)\in R;

2) Symmetry: for all x,y\in X, if (x,y)\in R then (y,x)\in R;

3) Transitivity: for all x,y,z \in X, if (x,y)\in R and (y,z)\in R then (x,z)\in R.

When (x,y)\in R we say that x is equivalent to y.

Instead of (x,y)\in R, the notation xRy, or even x\sim y, is also used.

An equivalence relation is a binary relation.

Example: If f maps the set X into a set Y, then R=\{(x_1,x_2)\in X\times X\,:\, f(x_1)=f(x_2)\} is an equivalence relation (cf. Kernel of a function).

For any y\in X the subset of X that consists of all x that are equivalent to y is called the equivalence class of y, denoted [y]_R. Any two equivalence classes either are disjoint or coincide, that is, any equivalence relation on X defines a partition (decomposition) of X, and vice versa.

A subset A of X is saturated with respect to R if a \in A,\, b \in X,\,a R b \Rightarrow b \in A: so A is saturated if and only if it is a union of equivalence classes of R. For any subset A of X, the saturation A^R is the set \{ b \in X : \exists a \in A,\,a R b \} = \cup_{a \in A} [a]_R, the union of the equivalence classes that meet A.

References

  • N. Bourbaki, Theory of Sets, Eléments de mathématiques 1, reprint ed. Springer (2004) ISBN 3-540-22525-0 Zbl 1061.03001
How to Cite This Entry:
Equivalence relation. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Equivalence_relation&oldid=51548
This article was adapted from an original article by V.N. Grishin (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article