Questions tagged [equivalence-relations]

For questions about relations that are reflexive, symmetric, and transitive. These are relations that model a sense of "equality" between elements of a set. Consider also using the (relation) tag.

An equivalence relation is a particular kind of relation that models a notion of "equality" between elements of a set. A relation $R$ on a set $X$ will be an equivalence relation if it satisfies the following properties:

  • Reflexive – For each $a \in X$, we have $a \mathrel{R} a$.
  • Symmetric – For any $a,b \in X$, $a \mathrel{R} b$ if and only if $b \mathrel{R} a$
  • Transitive – For any $a,b,c \in X$, if $a \mathrel{R} b$ and $b \mathrel{R} c$, then $a \mathrel{R} c$.

Commonly the symbols $\equiv$ or $\cong$ or $\simeq$ or $=$ are used for equivalence relations instead of the letter $R$. Here are some examples of equivalence relations:

  • On the set $\mathbf{Z}$ of integers define the relation $\equiv_{37}$ on $\mathbf{Z}\times \mathbf{Z}$ by saying $a\equiv_{37} b$ if both $a$ and $b$ give the same remainder when divided by $37$. If $a \equiv_{37} b$ we say that $a$ and $b$ are congruent modulo $37$.

  • Let $T$ be the set of all triangles in the plane. An example of an equivalence relation on $T$ is the relation of two triangles being congruent.

3120 questions
0
votes
2 answers

Equivalence relations on $\{1,2,3\} \times \{1,2,3\}$

Well, I am having problem with understanding why the minimum elements of an equivalence relation on the Cartesian Product $\{1,2,3\} \times \{1,2,3\}$ is $3$. In our lecture the explanation was, that we have defined transitivity for three elements…
Yalom
  • 105
0
votes
2 answers

Equivalence relation and distinct classes

A relation $R$ is defined on $\Bbb N$ by $aRb$ if $a^2+b^2$ is even. a) Prove $R$ is an equivalence relation. b) Determine the distinct equivalence classes. I am having trouble with the transitive part of the proof and the distinct classes.
0
votes
1 answer

Why does $\alpha \|{x}\|_1 < \|{x}\|_2 < \beta \|{x}\|_1$ show equivalence of norms?

I am reading a book on Hilbert space (“Introduction to Hilbert Space by Debnath and Mikusinski”) and I came across a proof for equivalence of norms that I do not understand. $E$ is a vector space and a non empty set, elements of $E$ are vectors.…
Tsangares
  • 797
0
votes
1 answer

Equivalence Relation reflexive,symmetric, anti-symmetric, transitive

Let X = {a, b, c, d} and give examples of a relation on X that is a. reflexive and symmetrical, but not transitive, b. reflexive and transitive, but not symmetrical, c. transitive and symmetrical, but not reflective. My Soultion for this is a)…
0
votes
1 answer

Discrete Equivalence Relation reflexive,symmetric, anti-symmetric, transitive

The binary relation $R$ on $X = \{a, b, c, d\} $ is given by $R = \{(a, a), (a, b), (b, b), (c, c), (c, d), (d, c)\}$. Determine if $R$ is reflexive, symmetric, anti-symmetric and / or transitive. My solution is that I thought it was symmetric…
0
votes
1 answer

Prove $\forall x,y \in \mathbb{Z} (x \equiv _m y$ $\rightarrow$ $\bar{x} = \bar{y}$)

pf. Assume x $\equiv _m y$. Then $\bar{x}$ = y (mod m). By equivalence y = x (mod m). Then y $\in $ [0,m-1]. Thus, $\bar{y}$ = y (mod m). Therefore, $\bar{x}$ = $\bar{y}$. Is this proof correctly written? I just did a direct proof. I feel like this…
JWigz
  • 87
0
votes
1 answer

What is the result when two equivalence classes are multiplied together?

In our mathematics course, we have defined $\overline{a}=\{a \in \mathbb{Z} \mid k \equiv a \text{ mod } m \}=\frac{a-k}{m}$. We have also defined $\overline{a} \times \overline{b}=\overline{ab}$. In order to calculate $\overline{ab}$, can I simply…
0
votes
2 answers

On $[0,1)$, $x \sim y$ if $x-y$ is rational. What are examples of equivalence classes?

$x-y$ is rational only if both $x$ and $y$ are rational. Isn't $x$ then equivalent to every rational provided the result falls in $[0,1)$? What then are the equivalence classes? Thanks!
Chris
  • 863
0
votes
1 answer

How to parametrize an equivalence relation?

Let's say $S = \{X_1, X_2, X_3, ...\}$ where each $X_i$ is some set. For all $X,Y,Z \in S$, define an equivalence relation ~ by $((X,Y) \sim (X,Z)$ if $|Y| = |Z|)$. Or simply, the first element of the tuples is the same, and the second elements have…
0
votes
1 answer

Prove transitivity of relation $R=\{(a,b) \in Z \times Z | \exists m,n \in N\setminus\{0\}: a^m = b^n \}$

Transitivity means: $(a,b) \in R \quad \land \quad (b,c) \in R \quad \implies (a,c) \in R$ But I'm not really sure how to go about it. I know that there is some $s,t,v,u$ such that $a^s = b^t$ and $b^v = c^u$ but to prove transitivity of the…
0
votes
0 answers

Make an equivalence relation on the set $A = \{1,2,3,4,5,6\}$.

The set $A = \{1,2,3,4,5,6\}$ is given. Write one equivalence relation from this set, write the equivalence classes and write the elements of the quotient set, and in the end on the set $B = \{1,2,3,4\}$ write the equivalence relation that has…
0
votes
0 answers

Solve implication using laws

(~p V ~q) V (~p V q) I tried to solve above equivalence like below (~p V ~p) V (q V ~q) but is there any law to get this or is it law if it is what is that law.
Blasanka
  • 151
0
votes
1 answer

Equivalence Relation Proof Question

Let $R$ be the relation on $N\times (N\setminus\{0\})$ defined by $((a, b),(c, d)) \in R$ if $ad = bc$. Prove that $R$ is an equivalence relation. I'm pretty confused with this problem, mainly because I don't understand the significance of…
0
votes
2 answers

If a relation is built with $=$, is the relation always an equivalence relation?

$R \subset \Bbb R \times \Bbb R$ I have now encountered a couple of relations that have the following form: $$R=\{(a,b)\in \Bbb R\times \Bbb R\,:\,a^2 = b^2\}$$ They seem to be always equivalence relations. Could it be that every relation that…
0
votes
1 answer

Prove that this is an Equivalence Relation.

Then give information about the equivalence classes as specified for The relation $R$ on $ℝ$ given by $xRy$ iff $x-y∈ℚ$. Give the equivalence class of $0$; of $1$ ; $\sqrt{2}$. First In order to solve this problem one must list what he/she knows…
Jon
  • 1,920