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Mathematical concept for comparing objects
Transitive binary relations
Symmetric Antisymmetric Connected Well-founded Has joins Has meets Reflexive Irreflexive Asymmetric
Total,
Semiconnex
Anti-
reflexive
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Preorder (Quasiorder) βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Partial order βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Total preorder βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Total order βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Prewellordering βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Well-quasi-ordering βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Well-ordering βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Lattice βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Join-semilattice βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Meet-semilattice βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ—
Strict partial order βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
Strict weak order βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
Strict total order βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
βœ— βœ— βœ— βœ— πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y
Symmetric Antisymmetric Connected Well-founded Has joins Has meets Reflexive Irreflexive Asymmetric
Definitions,
for all πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a,b}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle S\neq \varnothing :}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}&aRb\\\Rightarrow {}&bRa\end{aligned}}}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}aRb{\text{ and }}&bRa\\\Rightarrow a={}&b\end{aligned}}}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}a\neq {}&b\Rightarrow \\aRb{\text{ or }}&bRa\end{aligned}}}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\min S\\{\text{exists}}\end{aligned}}}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}a\vee b\\{\text{exists}}\end{aligned}}}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}a\wedge b\\{\text{exists}}\end{aligned}}}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle aRa}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\text{not }}aRa}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}aRb\Rightarrow \\{\text{not }}bRa\end{aligned}}}
πŸ‘ Green tick
Y indicates that the column's property is always true for the row's term (at the very left), while βœ— indicates that the property is not guaranteed
in general (it might, or might not, hold). For example, that every equivalence relation is symmetric, but not necessarily antisymmetric,
is indicated by πŸ‘ Green tick
Y in the "Symmetric" column and βœ— in the "Antisymmetric" column, respectively.

All definitions tacitly require the homogeneous relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R}
be transitive: for all πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a,b,c,}
if πŸ‘ {\displaystyle aRb}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle bRc}
then πŸ‘ {\displaystyle aRc.}

A term's definition may require additional properties that are not listed in this table.

πŸ‘ Image
The 52 equivalence relations on a 5-element set depicted as πŸ‘ {\displaystyle 5\times 5}
logical matrices (colored fields, including those in light gray, stand for ones; white fields for zeros). The row and column indices of nonwhite cells are the related elements, while the different colors, other than light gray, indicate the equivalence classes (each light gray cell is its own equivalence class).

In mathematics, an equivalence relation is a binary relation that is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive. The equipollence relation between line segments in geometry is a common example of an equivalence relation. A simpler example is numerical equality. Any number πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a}
is equal to itself (reflexive). If πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a=b}
, then πŸ‘ {\displaystyle b=a}
(symmetric). If πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a=b}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle b=c}
, then πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a=c}
(transitive).

Each equivalence relation provides a partition of the underlying set into disjoint equivalence classes. Two elements of the given set are equivalent to each other if and only if they belong to the same equivalence class.

Notation

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Various notations are used in the literature to denote that two elements πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle b}
of a set are equivalent with respect to an equivalence relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R;}
the most common are "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim b}
" and "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\equiv b}
", which are used when πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R}
is implicit, and variations of "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim _{R}b}
", "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\equiv _{R}b}
", or "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle {a\mathop {R} b}}
" to specify πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R}
explicitly. Non-equivalence may be written "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\not \sim b}
" or "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\not \equiv b}
".

Definitions

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A binary relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim \,}
on a set πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
is said to be an equivalence relation if it is reflexive, symmetric and transitive. That is, for all πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a,b,}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle c}
in πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X:}

πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
together with the relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim \,}
is called a setoid. The equivalence class of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a}
under πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim ,}
denoted πŸ‘ {\displaystyle [a],}
is defined as πŸ‘ {\displaystyle [a]=\{x\in X:x\sim a\}.}
[1][2]

Alternative definition using relational algebra

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In relational algebra, if πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R\subseteq X\times Y}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle S\subseteq Y\times Z}
are relations, then the composite relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle SR\subseteq X\times Z}
is defined so that πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x\,SR\,z}
if and only if there is a πŸ‘ {\displaystyle y\in Y}
such that πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x\,R\,y}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle y\,S\,z}
.[note 1] This definition is a generalisation of the definition of functional composition. The defining properties of an equivalence relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R}
on a set πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
can then be reformulated as follows:

Examples

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Simple example

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On the set πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X=\{a,b,c\}}
, the relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R=\{(a,a),(b,b),(c,c),(b,c),(c,b)\}}
is an equivalence relation. The following sets are equivalence classes of this relation: πŸ‘ {\displaystyle [a]=\{a\},~~~~[b]=[c]=\{b,c\}.}

The set of all equivalence classes for πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R}
is πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \{\{a\},\{b,c\}\}.}
This set is a partition of the set πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
. It is also called the quotient set of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
by πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R}
.

Equivalence relations

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The following relations are all equivalence relations:

Relations that are not equivalences

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  • The relation "β‰₯" between real numbers is reflexive and transitive, but not symmetric. For example, 7 β‰₯ 5 but not 5 β‰₯ 7.
  • The relation "has a common factor greater than 1 with" between natural numbers greater than 1, is reflexive and symmetric, but not transitive. For example, the natural numbers 2 and 6 have a common factor greater than 1, and 6 and 3 have a common factor greater than 1, but 2 and 3 do not have a common factor greater than 1.
  • The empty relation R (defined so that aRb is never true) on a set X is vacuously symmetric and transitive; however, it is not reflexive (unless X itself is empty).
  • The relation "is approximately equal to" between real numbers, even if more precisely defined, is not an equivalence relation, because although reflexive and symmetric, it is not transitive, since multiple small changes can accumulate to become a big change. However, if the approximation is defined asymptotically, for example by saying that two functions f and g are approximately equal near some point if the limit of f βˆ’ g is 0 at that point, then this defines an equivalence relation.

Connections to other relations

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Well-definedness under an equivalence relation

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If πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim \,}
is an equivalence relation on πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X,}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle P(x)}
is a property of elements of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X,}
such that whenever πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x\sim y,}
πŸ‘ {\displaystyle P(x)}
is true if πŸ‘ {\displaystyle P(y)}
is true, then the property πŸ‘ {\displaystyle P}
is said to be well-defined or a class invariant under the relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim .}

A frequent particular case occurs when πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f}
is a function from πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
to another set πŸ‘ {\displaystyle Y;}
if πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x_{1}\sim x_{2}}
implies πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f\left(x_{1}\right)=f\left(x_{2}\right)}
then πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f}
is said to be a morphism for πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim ,}
a class invariant under πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim ,}
or simply invariant under πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim .}
This occurs, e.g. in the character theory of finite groups. The latter case with the function πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f}
can be expressed by a commutative triangle. See also invariant. Some authors use "compatible with πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim }
" or just "respects πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim }
" instead of "invariant under πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim }
".

More generally, a function may map equivalent arguments (under an equivalence relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim _{A}}
) to equivalent values (under an equivalence relation πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim _{B}}
). Such a function is known as a morphism from πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim _{A}}
to πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim _{B}.}

Related important definitions

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Let πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a,b\in X}
, and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim }
be an equivalence relation. Some key definitions and terminology follow:

Equivalence class

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A subset πŸ‘ {\displaystyle Y}
of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
such that πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim b}
holds for all πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle b}
in πŸ‘ {\displaystyle Y}
, and never for πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a}
in πŸ‘ {\displaystyle Y}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle b}
outside πŸ‘ {\displaystyle Y}
, is called an equivalence class of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
by πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim }
. Let πŸ‘ {\displaystyle [a]:=\{x\in X:a\sim x\}}
denote the equivalence class to which πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a}
belongs. All elements of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
equivalent to each other are also elements of the same equivalence class.

Quotient set

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The set of all equivalence classes of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
by πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim ,}
denoted πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X/{\mathord {\sim }}:=\{[x]:x\in X\},}
is the quotient set of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
by πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim .}
If πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
is a topological space, there is a natural way of transforming πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X/\sim }
into a topological space; see Quotient space for the details.[undue weight? – discuss]

Projection

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The projection of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim \,}
is the function πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \pi :X\to X/{\mathord {\sim }}}
defined by πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \pi (x)=[x]}
which maps elements of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle X}
into their respective equivalence classes by πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \,\sim .}

Theorem on projections:[5] Let the function πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f:X\to B}
be such that if πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim b}
then πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f(a)=f(b).}
Then there is a unique function πŸ‘ {\displaystyle g:X/\sim \to B}
such that πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f=g\pi .}
If πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f}
is a surjection and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim b{\text{ if and only if }}f(a)=f(b),}
then πŸ‘ {\displaystyle g}
is a bijection.

Equivalence kernel

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The equivalence kernel of a function πŸ‘ {\displaystyle f}
is the equivalence relation ~ defined by πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x\sim y{\text{ if and only if }}f(x)=f(y).}
The equivalence kernel of an injection is the identity relation.

Partition

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A partition of X is a set P of nonempty subsets of X, such that every element of X is an element of a single element of P. Each element of P is a cell of the partition. Moreover, the elements of P are pairwise disjoint and their union is X.

Counting partitions

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Let X be a finite set with n elements. Since every equivalence relation over X corresponds to a partition of X, and vice versa, the number of equivalence relations on X equals the number of distinct partitions of X, which is the nth Bell number Bn:

πŸ‘ {\displaystyle B_{n}={\frac {1}{e}}\sum _{k=0}^{\infty }{\frac {k^{n}}{k!}}\quad }
(Dobinski's formula).

Fundamental theorem of equivalence relations

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A key result links equivalence relations and partitions:[6][7][8]

  • An equivalence relation ~ on a set X partitions X.
  • Conversely, corresponding to any partition of X, there exists an equivalence relation ~ on X.

In both cases, the cells of the partition of X are the equivalence classes of X by ~. Since each element of X belongs to a unique cell of any partition of X, and since each cell of the partition is identical to an equivalence class of X by ~, each element of X belongs to a unique equivalence class of X by ~. Thus there is a natural bijection between the set of all equivalence relations on X and the set of all partitions of X.

Comparing equivalence relations

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If πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim }
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \approx }
are two equivalence relations on the same set πŸ‘ {\displaystyle S}
, and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim b}
implies πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\approx b}
for all πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a,b\in S,}
then πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \approx }
is said to be a coarser relation than πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim }
, and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim }
is a finer relation than πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \approx }
. Equivalently,

The equality equivalence relation is the finest equivalence relation on any set, while the universal relation, which relates all pairs of elements, is the coarsest.

The relation "πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \sim }
is finer than πŸ‘ {\displaystyle \approx }
" on the collection of all equivalence relations on a fixed set is itself a partial order relation, which makes the collection a geometric lattice.[9]

Generating equivalence relations

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πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim b}
if there exists a natural number πŸ‘ {\displaystyle n}
and elements πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x_{0},\ldots ,x_{n}\in X}
such that πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a=x_{0}}
, πŸ‘ {\displaystyle b=x_{n}}
, and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x_{i-1}\mathrel {R} x_{i}}
or πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x_{i}\mathrel {R} x_{i-1}}
, for πŸ‘ {\displaystyle i=1,\ldots ,n.}
The equivalence relation generated in this manner can be trivial. For instance, the equivalence relation generated by any total order on X has exactly one equivalence class, X itself.

Algebraic structure

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Much of mathematics is grounded in the study of equivalences, and order relations. Lattice theory captures the mathematical structure of order relations. Even though equivalence relations are as ubiquitous in mathematics as order relations, the algebraic structure of equivalences is not as well known as that of orders. The former structure draws primarily on group theory and, to a lesser extent, on the theory of lattices, categories, and groupoids.

Group theory

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Just as order relations are grounded in ordered sets, sets closed under pairwise supremum and infimum, equivalence relations are grounded in partitioned sets, which are sets closed under bijections that preserve partition structure. Since all such bijections map an equivalence class onto itself, such bijections are also known as permutations. Hence permutation groups (also known as transformation groups) and the related notion of orbit shed light on the mathematical structure of equivalence relations.

Let '~' denote an equivalence relation over some nonempty set A, called the universe or underlying set. Let G denote the set of bijective functions over A that preserve the partition structure of A, meaning that for all πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x\in A}
and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle g\in G,g(x)\in [x].}
Then the following three connected theorems hold:[11]

  • ~ partitions A into equivalence classes. (This is the Fundamental Theorem of Equivalence Relations, mentioned above);
  • Given a partition of A, G is a transformation group under composition, whose orbits are the cells of the partition;[15]
  • Given a transformation group G over A, there exists an equivalence relation ~ over A, whose equivalence classes are the orbits of G.[16][17]

In sum, given an equivalence relation ~ over A, there exists a transformation group G over A whose orbits are the equivalence classes of A under ~.

This transformation group characterisation of equivalence relations differs fundamentally from the way lattices characterize order relations. The arguments of the lattice theory operations meet and join are elements of some universe A. Meanwhile, the arguments of the transformation group operations composition and inverse are elements of a set of bijections, A β†’ A.

Moving to groups in general, let H be a subgroup of some group G. Let ~ be an equivalence relation on G, such that πŸ‘ {\displaystyle a\sim b{\text{ if and only if }}ab^{-1}\in H.}
The equivalence classes of ~β€”also called the orbits of the action of H on Gβ€”are the right cosets of H in G. Interchanging a and b yields the left cosets.

Related thinking can be found in Rosen (2008: chpt. 10).

Categories and groupoids

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Let G be a set and let "~" denote an equivalence relation over G. Then we can form a groupoid representing this equivalence relation as follows. The objects are the elements of G, and for any two elements x and y of G, there exists a unique morphism from x to y if and only if πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x\sim y.}

The advantages of regarding an equivalence relation as a special case of a groupoid include:

  • Whereas the notion of "free equivalence relation" does not exist, that of a free groupoid on a directed graph does. Thus it is meaningful to speak of a "presentation of an equivalence relation," i.e., a presentation of the corresponding groupoid;
  • Bundles of groups, group actions, sets, and equivalence relations can be regarded as special cases of the notion of groupoid, a point of view that suggests a number of analogies;
  • In many contexts "quotienting," and hence the appropriate equivalence relations often called congruences, are important. This leads to the notion of an internal groupoid in a category.[18]

Lattices

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The equivalence relations on any set X, when ordered by set inclusion, form a complete lattice, called Con X by convention. The canonical map ker : X^X β†’ Con X, relates the monoid X^X of all functions on X and Con X. ker is surjective but not injective. Less formally, the equivalence relation ker on X, takes each function f : X β†’ X to its kernel ker f. Likewise, ker(ker) is an equivalence relation on X^X.

Equivalence relations and mathematical logic

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Equivalence relations are a ready source of examples or counterexamples. For example, an equivalence relation with exactly two infinite equivalence classes is an easy example of a theory which is Ο‰-categorical, but not categorical for any larger cardinal number.

An implication of model theory is that the properties defining a relation can be proved independent of each other (and hence necessary parts of the definition) if and only if, for each property, examples can be found of relations not satisfying the given property while satisfying all the other properties. Hence the three defining properties of equivalence relations can be proved mutually independent by the following three examples:

  • Reflexive and transitive: The relation ≀ on N. Or any preorder;
  • Symmetric and transitive: The relation R on N, defined as aRb ↔ ab β‰  0. Or any partial equivalence relation;
  • Reflexive and symmetric: The relation R on Z, defined as aRb ↔ "a βˆ’ b is divisible by at least one of 2 or 3." Or any dependency relation.

Properties definable in first-order logic that an equivalence relation may or may not possess include:

  • The number of equivalence classes is finite or infinite;
  • The number of equivalence classes equals the (finite) natural number n;
  • All equivalence classes have infinite cardinality;
  • The number of elements in each equivalence class is the natural number n.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Sometimes the composition πŸ‘ {\displaystyle SR\subseteq X\times Z}
    is instead written as πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R;S}
    , or as πŸ‘ {\displaystyle RS}
    ; in both cases, πŸ‘ {\displaystyle R}
    is the first relation that is applied. See the article on Composition of relations for more information.
  1. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Equivalence Class". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-30.
  2. ^ a b c "7.3: Equivalence Classes". Mathematics LibreTexts. 2017-09-20. Retrieved 2020-08-30.
  3. ^ Halmos, Paul Richard (1914). Naive Set Theory. New York: Springer. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-387-90104-6. {{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  4. ^ Lena L. Severance (1930) The Theory of Equipollences; Method of Analytical Geometry of Sig. Bellavitis, link from HathiTrust
  5. ^ Garrett Birkhoff and Saunders Mac Lane, 1999 (1967). Algebra, 3rd ed. p. 35, Th. 19. Chelsea.
  6. ^ Wallace, D. A. R., 1998. Groups, Rings and Fields. p. 31, Th. 8. Springer-Verlag.
  7. ^ Dummit, D. S., and Foote, R. M., 2004. Abstract Algebra, 3rd ed. p. 3, Prop. 2. John Wiley & Sons.
  8. ^ Karel Hrbacek & Thomas Jech (1999) Introduction to Set Theory, 3rd edition, pages 29–32, Marcel Dekker
  9. ^ Birkhoff, Garrett (1995), Lattice Theory, Colloquium Publications, vol. 25 (3rd ed.), American Mathematical Society, ISBN 9780821810255. Sect. IV.9, Theorem 12, page 95
  10. ^ Garrett Birkhoff and Saunders Mac Lane, 1999 (1967). Algebra, 3rd ed. p. 33, Th. 18. Chelsea.
  11. ^ Rosen (2008), pp. 243–45. Less clear is Β§10.3 of Bas van Fraassen, 1989. Laws and Symmetry. Oxford Univ. Press.
  12. ^ Bas van Fraassen, 1989. Laws and Symmetry. Oxford Univ. Press: 246.
  13. ^ Wallace, D. A. R., 1998. Groups, Rings and Fields. Springer-Verlag: 22, Th. 6.
  14. ^ Wallace, D. A. R., 1998. Groups, Rings and Fields. Springer-Verlag: 24, Th. 7.
  15. ^ Proof.[12] Let function composition interpret group multiplication, and function inverse interpret group inverse. Then G is a group under composition, meaning that πŸ‘ {\displaystyle x\in A}
    and πŸ‘ {\displaystyle g\in G,[g(x)]=[x],}
    because G satisfies the following four conditions: Let f and g be any two elements of G. By virtue of the definition of G, [g(f(x))] = [f(x)] and [f(x)] = [x], so that [g(f(x))] = [x]. Hence G is also a transformation group (and an automorphism group) because function composition preserves the partitioning of πŸ‘ {\displaystyle A.\blacksquare }
  16. ^ Wallace, D. A. R., 1998. Groups, Rings and Fields. Springer-Verlag: 202, Th. 6.
  17. ^ Dummit, D. S., and Foote, R. M., 2004. Abstract Algebra, 3rd ed. John Wiley & Sons: 114, Prop. 2.
  18. ^ Borceux, F. and Janelidze, G., 2001. Galois theories, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-80309-8

References

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  • Brown, Ronald, 2006. Topology and Groupoids. Booksurge LLC. ISBN 1-4196-2722-8.
  • Castellani, E., 2003, "Symmetry and equivalence" in Brading, Katherine, and E. Castellani, eds., Symmetries in Physics: Philosophical Reflections. Cambridge Univ. Press: 422–433.
  • Robert Dilworth and Crawley, Peter, 1973. Algebraic Theory of Lattices. Prentice Hall. Chpt. 12 discusses how equivalence relations arise in lattice theory.
  • Higgins, P.J., 1971. Categories and groupoids. Van Nostrand. Downloadable since 2005 as a TAC Reprint.
  • John Randolph Lucas, 1973. A Treatise on Time and Space. London: Methuen. Section 31.
  • Rosen, Joseph (2008) Symmetry Rules: How Science and Nature are Founded on Symmetry. Springer-Verlag. Mostly chapters. 9,10.
  • Raymond Wilder (1965) Introduction to the Foundations of Mathematics 2nd edition, Chapter 2-8: Axioms defining equivalence, pp 48–50, John Wiley & Sons.

External links

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