Bijection
$ \def\Id {\mathop{\rm Id}} $
A function (or mapping) is called bijective if it is both one-to-one and onto, i.e., if it is both injective and surjective.
In other words, a function $ f : A \to B $ from a set $A$ to a set $B$ is
- a bijective function or a bijection
if and only if
- $ f(A) = B $ and $ a_1 \ne a_2 $ implies $ f(a_1) \ne f(a_2) $ for all $ a_1, a_2 \in A $.
Equivalent condition
A mapping is bijective if and only if
- it has left-sided and right-sided inverses
and therefore if and only if
- there is a unique (two-sided) inverse mapping $ f^{-1} $ such that $ f^{-1} \circ f = \Id_A $ and $ f \circ f^{-1} = \Id_B $.
Application
Bijections are essential for the theory of cardinal numbers:
Two sets have the same number of elements (the same cardinality),
if there is a bijective mapping between them.
By the Schröder-Bernstein theorem
— and not depending on the Axiom of Choice —
a bijective mapping between two sets $A$ and $B$ exists
if there are injective mappings both from $A$ to $B$ and from $B$ to $A$.
Related notions
In certain contexts, a bijective mapping of a set $A$ onto itself is called a permutation of $A$.
A bijective homomorphism is called isomorphism, and—if domain and range coincide—automorphism.
Bijection. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Bijection&oldid=30987