1 / 7

2. Inverse functions Inverse relation, Function is a relation

2. Inverse functions Inverse relation, Function is a relation Is the function’s inverse relation a function? No Example: A={1,2,3},B={a,b}, f :A→B, f ={(1,a),(2,b),(3,b)} is a function, but inverse relation f -1 ={(a,1),(b,2),(b,3)} is not a function.

tien
Download Presentation

2. Inverse functions Inverse relation, Function is a relation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2. Inverse functions • Inverse relation, • Function is a relation • Is the function’s inverse relation a function? No • Example: A={1,2,3},B={a,b}, f:A→B, f={(1,a),(2,b),(3,b)} is a function, but inverse relation f-1={(a,1),(b,2),(b,3)} is not a function.

  2. Theorem 3.7: Let f be a function from A to B, then inverse relation f-1 is a function if only if f is one-to-one correspondence. • Proof: (1)If f –1 is a function, then f is one-to-one correspondence. • (i)f is onto. • For any bB,there exists aA such that f (a)=?b • (ii)f is one to one. • If there exist a1,a2A such that f(a1)=f(a2)=bB, then a1?=a2 • (2)If f is one-to-one correspondence,then f –1 is a function • f -1 is a function, for any bB,there exists one and only aA so that (b,a) f-1. • For any bB, there exists aA such that (b,a)?f-1. • For bB,If there exist a1,a2A such that (b,a1) f-1 and (b,a2) f-1,then a1?=a2

  3. Definition 3.5: Let f be one-to-one correspondence between A and B. We say that inverse relation f-1 is the inverse function of f. We denoted f -1:B→A. And if f (a)=b then f -1(b)=a. • Theorem 3.8: Let f be one-to-one correspondence between A and B. Then the inverse function f -1 is also one-to-one correspondence. • Proof: (1) f –1is onto (f –1 is a function from B to A • For any aA,there exists bB such that f -1(b)=a) • (2)f –1 is one to one • For any b1,b2B, if b1b2 then f -1(b1) f -1(b2). • If f:A→B is one-to-one correspondence, then f -1:B→A is also one-to-one correspondence. The function f is called invertible.

  4. Theorem 3.9: Let f be one-to-one correspondence between A and B. • Then • (1)(f -1)-1= f • (2)f -1f=IA • (3)f f -1=IB • Proof: (1) • (2)

  5. Let f:A→B and g:B→A, • Is g the inverse function of f ? • f g?=IB and g  f ?=IA • Theorem 3.10:Let g be one-to-one correspondence between A and B, and f be one-to-one correspondence between B and C. Then (fg)-1= g-1f -1 • Proof: By Theorem 3.6, fg is one-to-one correspondence from A to C • Similarly, By theorem 3.7, g-1 is a function from B to A, and f –1 is a function from C to B.

  6. Theorem 3.11: Let A and B be two finite set with |A|=|B|, and let f be a function from A to B. Then • (1)If f is one to one, then f is onto. • (2) If f is onto, then f is one to one. • The prove are left your exercises.

  7. Exercise: P176 21,22 • Prove T 3.11 • Cardinality • Paradox • Pigeonhole principle P88 3.3

More Related