Thursday, September 30, 2010

Equivalence

See also: Mathematical Analysis



Let's recall that a relation is said to be a preorder  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow ;] it is reflexive and transitive.

Two important classes of preorders are equivalences and partial orders called also posets (for partially ordered sets). This post is concerned with equivalences. But first the notion of commutativity is defined (in the context of relations).



A relational graph  T  is called commutative (or symmetric)  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow ;]

[; :\quad\quad \forall_{x\ \ y}\ ((x\ y)\in T\quad\Leftrightarrow\quad (y\ x)\in T) ;]

REMARK 0  It's amusing (to me) that by replacing  [;\Leftrightarrow ;]  by  [;\Rightarrow ;]  we would obtain a differently looking definition of the same class of commutative relational graphs.

We may describe the same commutativity notion via reversed relational graphs, where the reversed relation graph  [;T^\circ;]  reversed to a relational graph  [;T;]  is defined as follows:

[; :\quad\quad T^\circ := \{(y\ x) : (x\ y) \in T\} ;]

THEOREM 0   A relational graph  [;T;]  is commutative   [;\Leftrightarrow\quad T^\circ = T ;].



A relation  [;\mathbf{T} := (X\ X\ T) ;]  is called commutative (or symmetric)  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow ;]  [;T;]  is a commutative relational graph.

DEFINITION 0  A relation  [;\mathbf{T} := (X\ X\ T) ;]  is said to be an equivalence  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow ;]  the relational graph  [;T;]  is transitive, commutative and reflexive.

In other words, for a relation to be an equivalence is the same as to be a commutative preorder.



A family of sets  [;\mathbf{P};]  is called a partition of a set  [;X;]  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow ;]  the following two statements hold:

  1. [;\cup \mathbf{P} = X ;]       ([;\mathbf{P};]  covers  [;X;]  exactly)

  2. [; \forall_{A\ B\ \in\ \mathbf{P}}\ (A=B\ \ \vee\ \ A\cap B = \emptyset) ;]



With every partition  [;\mathbf{P};]  of set  [;X;] there is associated canonically an equivalence relation  [;\equiv_\mathbf{P};]  in  [;X;]  defined as follows:

[;:\quad\quad (x\ y)\ \in\ \ \equiv_{\mathbf{P}}\quad\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow\quad \exists_{A\in\mathbf{P}}\ x\ y\in A ;]

i.e.

[;:\quad\quad\quad \equiv_{\mathbf{P}}\ \ :=\ \cup_{A\in \mathbf{P}}\ A\times A ;]

And conversely, every equivalence  [;\mathbf{T};]  in a set  [;X;]  canonically leads to a partition  [;\mathbf{P}_{\mathfb{T}};]  of  [;X;]  defined as a family of equivalence classes as follows:

[;:\quad\quad \mathbf{P}_{\mathfb{T}}\ :=\ \{[x] : x\in X\} ;]

where the equivalence class  [;[x];]  is given by equality:

[;:\quad\quad\quad [x]\ :=\ \{ y\in X\ :\ (x\ y)\in\mathbf{T} \} ;]

This completes a description of a one to one canonical correspondence between equivalence relations and partitions.




Two extremal examples of equivalences:

  • [;(X\ X\ \Delta_X);]  is the so called strongest equivalence relation in a set  [;X;];

  • [;(X\ X\ X\!\times\! X);]  is the so called weakest equivalence relation in a set  [;X;].

Every equivalence relation  [;(X\ X\ T;]  is contained between the two above in the following sense:

[;\bullet\quad\quad\quad \Delta_X\ \subset T\ \subset\ X\!\times\! X ;]

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Transitivity reflexivity preorder

See also: Mathematical Analysis - index



A relational graph [;T;] is called transitive  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow;] 

  • [; \forall_{x\ y\ z} (((x\ y) \in T\ \ \&\ \ (y\ z) \in T)\quad (x\ z) \in T) ;]


A relation [;\mathbf{T} := (X\ X\ T);] is called transitive  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow;]  the relational graph  [;T;]  is transitive.

REMARK 0  Transitivity is defined only for relations for which codomain coincides with the domain (we have  [;X=Y;]  so to speak). When codomain coincides with the domain, say  [;X=Y;],  then we say that the relation is in  [;X;]  (rather than in  [;X\ Y;]).



A relational graph  [;T;]  is called reflexive  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow;] 
  • [;\forall_{x\ y} ( (x\ y) \in T\quad\Rightarrow\quad ((x\ x)\in T\ \ \&\ \ (y\ y) \in T) ;]



Let  [;X;]  be an arbitrary set. Then the following set  [;\Delta_{X};]  is called the diagonal of  [;X;]:

[;: \quad\quad \Delta_{X} := \{ (x\ x) : x\in X \} ;]

We see that  [;\Delta_{X};]  is a relational graph, and that

[;: \quad\quad \mathbf{\Delta}_{X}\ \ :=\ \ (X\ X\ \Delta_{X}) ;]

is a relation in  [;X;].

A relation [;\mathbf{T} := (X\ X\ T);] is called reflexive  [;\Leftarrow : \Rightarrow;]  the relational graph  [;T;]  contains the diagonal:  [;\Delta_X \subseteq T;].

REMARK 1  Reflexivity is defined only for relations for which codomain coincides with the domain.

REMARK 2  The relational graph of any reflexive relation is reflexive, while the inverse claim fails: a relation may have a reflexive graph without being reflexive, as for instance the empty relation in a non-empty set  [;X;]:

[;:\quad\quad(X\ X\ \emptyset) ;]

THEOREM 0  Let  [;\mathbf{T} := (X\ X\ T);]  be a transitive relation. Then the relational graph

[; :\quad\quad\underline{T} := T\cup\Delta_X ;]

is both transitive and reflexive. Furthermore

[; :\quad\quad\underline{\mathbf{T}} := (X\ X\ \underline{T});]

is a transitive and reflexive relation



A relation which is both transitive and reflexive is called a preorder.

We saw that each transitive relation in  [;X;]  leads to a preorder by extending it by the diagonal  [; \Delta_X;].

Diagonal  [;\Delta_{X};]  itself is a preorder. And so is the complete relation in  [;X;],  which has  [;X\times X;]  for its relational graph.

Relational graphs and relations

See also: Mathematical Analysis — index



Let's start with three definitions:

  • The Cartesian product  [;X\times Y;]  of two sets  [;X\ Y;]  is defined as the set of all ordered pairs such that their first and second terms belong respectively to  [;X\ Y;]:

    [;:\quad\quad X\times Y\ \ :=\ \ \{(x\ y)\ :\ x\in X\ \ \&\ \ y\in Y\};]

  • A set [;T;] is said to be a relational graph  [; \Leftarrow : \Rightarrow ;]  every element of [;T;] is an ordered pair.

  • An ordered triple  [;\mathbf{T} := (X\ Y\ T);]  is said to be a relation  [; \Leftarrow : \Rightarrow\ \ T ;]  is a relational graph such that [;T \subseteq X\times Y ;].  Such a relation  [;\mathbf{T};]  is said to be a relation in the sets  [;X\ \ Y;],  where  [;X;]  is called the domain of relation  [;\mathbf{T};],  and  [;Y;] is called the codomain or the target of [;\mathbf{T};].


REMARK  We could define a relation in fewer words: an ordered triple  [;\mathbf{T} := (X\ Y\ T);]  is said to be a relation  [; \Leftarrow : \Rightarrow\ \ T \subseteq X\times Y ;].

We see that a relation is an ordered triple of the form:

          (domain  codomain  rel_graph)

where rel_graph is a relational graph contained in the Cartesian product of the domain and codomain.

Observe that  [;(X \ Y\ X\times\ Y);]  is a relation in the sets  [;X\ \ Y;];  its relational graph contains the relational graph of any other relation in the sets  [;X\ \ Y;].  Also the empty set is a relational graph. It is contained in any other relational graph. Thus any relational graph of any relation in the sets  [;X\ \ Y;];  is contained between these two relational graphs.

Kuratowski ordered pairs

See also: Mathematical Analysis — index



An unordered pair is simply a 2-element set, say  [;\{a\ \ b\};],  where  [;a \ne b ;]  (note that when  [; a = b ;]  then  [;\{a\ \ b\};],  is a 1-element set).

Notation for ordered pairs is  [;(a\ \ b);],  where  [;a\ \ b;]  are arbitrary--they can be different or they may coincide. The ordered pairs satisfy the following axiom:

[; :\quad\quad (a\ \ b)\ =\ (c\ \ d)\ \ \ \Leftrightarrow\ \ \ (a=c\ \ \&\ \ b=d) ;]

An elegant constructive definition of an ordered pair in the set-theoretical term was given by Kazimierz Kuratowski:

[; :\quad\quad (a\ \ b)\ :=\ \{ \{ a \}\ \{a\ \ b\}\} ;]



Now we can define an ordered triple [;(a\ \ b\ \ c);]. It can be done in many different ways. For many purposes the details of an exact constructive definition are irrelevant. Then it is important only that ordered triples satisfy the following axiom:

[; :\quad\quad (a\ \ b\ \ c)\ =\ (x\ \ y\ \z)\ \ \ \Leftrightarrow\ \ \ (a=x\ \ \&\ \ b=y\ \ \&\ \ c=z) ;]

A definition in the Kuratowski's style is:

[; :\quad\quad (a\ \ b\ \ c)\ :=\ \{ \{ a \}\ \{a\ \ b\}\ \{a\ \ b\ \ c\}\} ;]

We may use Kuratowski pairs to define an ordered triple as a sequence of length 3:

[; :\quad\quad (a\ \ b\ \ c)\ :=\ \{ (0\ a)\ \ (1\ b)\ \ (2\ c) \} ;]

or as a string (again of length 3):

[; :\quad\quad (a\ \ b\ \ c)\ := (a\ \ (b\ \ c)) ;]

where  [;a;]  is called the head of the string, and [;(b\ \ c);] is the tail of the string.

Different types of the triples of the same three elements [;a\ b\ c;] are not equal. Thus be consistent, don't mix them. And if you do then use different notation for each type.

Mathematical Analysis - index

Notation


Introduction



  1. Set theory

    1. Kuratowski ordered pairs

    2. Relations
      1. Relational graphs and relations

      2. Transitivity, reflexivity, preorder

      3. Equivalence

      4. Partial ordering (posets)


    3. Functions


  2. Algebra