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One-to-One and Onto, Inverse Functions

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1 One-to-One and Onto, Inverse Functions
Lecture 32 Section 7.2 Wed, Mar 16, 2005

2 One-to-one Correspondences
A function f : A  B is a one-to-one correspondence if f is one-to-one and onto. f has all four of the basic properties. f establishes a ‘pairing” of the elements of A with the elements of B.

3 One-to-one Correspondences
One-to-one correspondences are very important because two sets are considered to have the same number of elements if there exists a one-to-one correspondence between them.

4 Example: One-to-one Correspondence
Are any of the following “functions” one-to-one correspondences? f : Q  Q by f(a/b) = 2a/b. g : Q  Q by g(a/b) = b/a. h : Q  Q by h(a/b) = (a/b)2. m : Q  Q by m(a/b) = a/b. For the relation g, what if we replace Q with Q – {0}?

5 Inverse Relations Let R be a relation from A to B.
The inverse of R is the relation R–1 from B to A defined by the property that (x, y)  R–1 if and only if (y, x)  R.

6 Example: Inverse Relation
Let f : Q  Q by f(a/b) = 2a/b. Describe f –1. f –1(a/b) = a/2b. Which of the four basic properties does f –1 have?

7 Example: Inverse Relation
Let g : Q  Q by g(a/b) = b/a. Describe g–1. g–1(a/b) = b/a. Which of the four basic properties does g–1 have?

8 Example: Inverse Relation
Let g : Q  Q by h(a/b) = (a/b)2. Describe h–1. Which of the four basic properties does h–1 have?

9 Inverse Relations and the Basic Properties
A relation R has the first basic property if and only if R–1 has the third basic property. x  A,  at least one y  B, (x, y)  R. y  B,  at least one x  A, (x, y)  R. A relation R has the second basic property if and only if R–1 has the fourth basic property. x  A,  at most one y  B, (x, y)  R. y  B,  at most one x  A, (x, y)  R.

10 Inverse Functions The inverse of a function is, in general, a relation, but not a function. Theorem: The inverse of a function is itself a function if and only if the function is a one-to-one correspondence. Corollary: If f is a one-to-one correspondence, then f –1 is a one-to-one correspondence.

11 Example: Inverse Functions
Let A = R – {1/3}. Let B = R – {2/3}. Define f : A  B by f(x) = 2x/(3x – 1). Find f –1. Let y = 2x/(3x – 1). Swap x and y: x = 2y/(3y – 1). Solve for y: y = x/(3x – 2). Therefore, f –1(x) = x/(3x – 2).

12 Q and Z Theorem: There is a one-to-one correspondence from Z to Q.
Proof: Consider only rationals in reduced form. Arrange the positive rationals in order First by the sum of numerator and denominator. Then, within groups, by numerator.

13 Q and Z The sequence is 1/1, 1/2, 2/1, 1/3, 3/1, 1/4, 2/3, 3/2, 4/1, …
The first group: 1/1 The second group: 1/2, 2/1 The third group: 1/3, 3/1 The fourth group: 1/4, 2/3, 3/2, 4/1 Etc. The sequence is 1/1, 1/2, 2/1, 1/3, 3/1, 1/4, 2/3, 3/2, 4/1, …

14 Q and Z Let f : Z to Q be the function that
Maps the positive integer n to the nth rational in this list. Maps the negative integer -n to the negative of the rational that n maps to. Maps 0 to 0. This is a one-to-one correspondence.

15 Q and Z What is f(20)? What is f –1(4/5)?


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