2.3 KiB
Lecture Topic: Relation examples
Relation Example 1
$R = {(i,j) | i \in \mathbb{Z}, j \in \mathbb{Z}, i-j =5n \text{ for some integer n}}$
e.g (22,7) \in R
because $22-7 = 5(3)$
e.g (7,22) \in R
because $7-22 = -15 = 5(-3)$
e.g (22,9) \notin R
because 22-9 = 13
, which is not a multiple of 5
Reflexive? Yes
For every integer a, $a-a = 0 = 5(0)$
Therefor (a,a) \in R
for every integer a
Symmetric? Yes Let a, b be any integer, such that (a,b) is in the relation (can we prove that (b,a) is in relation as well?)
Since (a,b) is in the relation, a-b = 5n
, so, $b-a = -5(n) = 5(-n)$
Note: (b-a) = -(a-b)
Transitive? Yes
Let a,b,c be any integers such that (a,b) \in R
and $(b,c) \in R$
Can we prove that (a,c) \in R
?
Since (a,b) \in R
, we know a-b=5n
for some $n \in \mathbb{Z}$
Since (b,c) \in R
, we know b-c=5p
for some n \in \mathbb{Z}
Now, $(a-c) = (a-b) + (b-c) = 5n + 5p = 5(np)$ Therefore, $(a-c) \in R$ Note: This is an integer because it is the sum of integers
Relation Example 2
R = \{(i,j) | i \in \mathbb{R}, j \in \mathbb{R}, i + 2 > j\}
Examples:
(5,2) \in R
because(5+2) > 2
(3,4) \in R
because(3+2) > 4
(0,7) \notin R
because(0+2) \ngtr 7
Reflexive? Yes Symmetric? No Transitive? No
Proof: We need to find real numbers where a,b,c
where (a,b) \in R
and (b,c) \in R
but (a,c) \notin R
For example, a = 1, b = 2, c = 3
(1,2) \in R
because $1+2 > 2$
(2,3) \in R
because 2+2 > 3
But (1,3) \notin R
because $(1+2) \ngtr 3$
\therefore
R is not transitive
Equivalence relations
Equivalence relations have all three of these properties Any equivalence relation R on a set A induces a partition of A
- Splits A into equivalence classes
- Each class contains elements that are related to themselves and to each other, but to nothing outside the class
So, for the above relation:
R = \{(i,j) | i \in \mathbb{Z}, j \in \mathbb{Z}, i-j =5n \text{ for some integer n}\}
This forms an equivalence relation
So for the set of all integers, this forms 5 equivalence classes:
..., 0, 5, 10, ...
..., 1, 6, 11, ...
..., 2, 7, 12, ...
..., 3, 8, 13, ...
..., 4, 9, 14, ...
Example
$A = {-3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3}$
R = \{(i,j) | i \in \mathbb{A}, j \in \mathbb{A}, i^2 = j^2\}
So the equivalence classes induced by this relation:
- -3, 3
- -2, 2
- -1, 1
- 0