Difference between revisions of "Equivalence relation"

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| [[Relation#Types_of_relation|Symmetric]]  
 
| [[Relation#Types_of_relation|Symmetric]]  
| {{M|\forall x,y\in X[M|(x,y) \in \sim \implies (y,x) \in \sim]}}. Which we write {{M|\forall x,y \in X[x\sim y \implies y\sim x]}}.
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| {{M|\forall x,y\in X[(x,y) \in \sim \implies (y,x) \in \sim]}}. Which we write {{M|\forall x,y \in X[x\sim y \implies y\sim x]}}.
 
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*[[Relation]]
 
*[[Relation]]
 
*[[Equivalence class]]
 
*[[Equivalence class]]
**[[An equivalence class partitions a set]].
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**[[The equivalence classes of an equivalence relation partitions a set]].
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* [[Canonical projection of an equivalence relation]]
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* {{link|Passing to the quotient|function}} - things are often factored through the [[canonical projection of an equivalence relation]]
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* [[Equivalence relation induced by a map]] - while many things induce equivalence relations, the "purity" of any [[function]] doing so means this ought to be here
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** [[Factoring a function through the projection of an equivalence relation induced by that function yields an injection]]
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*** [[If a surjective function is factored through the canonical projection of the equivalence relation induced by that function then the yielded function is a bijection]]
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==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references group="Note"/>
 
<references group="Note"/>

Latest revision as of 15:18, 12 February 2019

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Definition

A relation, [ilmath]\sim[/ilmath], in [ilmath]X[/ilmath][Note 1] is an equivalence relation if it has the following properties[1]:

Name Definition
1 Reflexive [ilmath]\forall x\in X[(x,x) \in \sim][/ilmath]. Which we write [ilmath]\forall x\in X[x\sim x][/ilmath].
2 Symmetric [ilmath]\forall x,y\in X[(x,y) \in \sim \implies (y,x) \in \sim][/ilmath]. Which we write [ilmath]\forall x,y \in X[x\sim y \implies y\sim x][/ilmath].
3 Transitive [ilmath]\forall x,y,z\in X[((x,y) \in \sim \wedge (y,z) \in \sim) \implies (x,z) \in \sim][/ilmath]. Which we write [ilmath]\forall x,y,z \in X [(x\sim y \wedge y\sim z) \implies x\sim z][/ilmath].

Terminology

  • An equivalence class is the name given to the set of all things which are equivalent under a given equivalence relation.
    • Often denoted [ilmath][a][/ilmath] for all the things equivalent to [ilmath]a[/ilmath]
    • Defined as [ilmath][a]:=\{b\in X\ \vert\ b\sim a\}[/ilmath]
  • If there are multiple equivalence relations at play, we often use different letters to distinguish them, eg [ilmath]\sim_\alpha[/ilmath] and [ilmath][\cdot]_\alpha[/ilmath]
  • Sometimes different symbols are employed, for example [ilmath]\cong[/ilmath] denotes a topological homeomorphism (which is an equivalence relation on topological spaces)

See Also

Notes

  1. This terminology means [ilmath]\sim \subseteq X\times X[/ilmath], as described on the relation page.

References

  1. Set Theory - Thomas Jech - Third millennium edition, revised and expanded


Old Page

An equivalence relation is a special kind of relation

Required properties

Given a relation [ilmath]R[/ilmath] in [ilmath]A[/ilmath] we require the following properties to define a relation (these are restated for convenience from the relation page)

Reflexive

A relation [ilmath]R[/ilmath] if for all [ilmath]a\in A[/ilmath] we have [ilmath]aRa[/ilmath]

Symmetric

A relation [ilmath]R[/ilmath] is symmetric if for all [ilmath]a,b\in A[/ilmath] we have [ilmath]aRb\implies bRa[/ilmath]

Transitive

A relation [ilmath]R[/ilmath] is transitive if for all [ilmath]a,b,c\in A[/ilmath] we have [ilmath]aRb\text{ and }bRc\implies aRc[/ilmath]

Definition

A relation [ilmath]R[/ilmath] is an equivalence relation if it is:

  • reflexive
  • symmetric
  • transitive