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Definition: Equivalence Relation
A relation R on a (non-empty) set A is called an equivalence relation iff it is :
(i) reflexive, (ii) symmetric and (iii) transitive, i.e. iff
- a R a for all a ∈ A
- a R b implies b R a for all a, b ∈ A and
- a R b, b R c implies a R c for all a, b, c ∈ A
Definition: Equivalence Class
If R is an equivalence relation on a set A, then the equivalence class of an element \[a \in A\] is the set of all elements of A related to a.
This means an equivalence class collects all elements that are considered “equivalent” under the given relation.
Example 1
Let T be the set of all triangles in a plane, with R a relation in T given by
R = {(T₁, T₂) : T₁ is congruent to T₂}. Show that R is an equivalence relation.
Solution:
R is reflexive, since every triangle is congruent to itself.
Further, (T₁, T₂) ∈ R ⇒ T₁ is congruent to T₂ ⇒ T₂ is congruent to T₁ ⇒ (T₂, T₁) ∈ R. Hence, R is symmetric.
Moreover, (T₁, T₂), (T₂, T₃) ∈ R ⇒ T₁ is congruent to T₂ and T₂ is congruent to T₃ ⇒ T₁ is congruent to T₃ ⇒ (T₁, T₃) ∈ R.
Therefore, R is an equivalence relation.
Example 2
Let A = {real numbers}
Let R = {(a, b) : a, b ∈ A and a − b < 5}
Is R an equivalence relation? Justify your answer.
Solution:
(i) Reflexive: For all a ∈ A, a − a = 0 < 5 ⇒ aRa.
∴ R is reflexive.
(ii) Symmetric: For example, let a = 2, b = 8, then
a − b = 2 − 8 = −6 < 5 ⇒ aRb
But, b − a = 8 − 2 = 6 ≮ 5 ⇒ bRa.
Hence, R is not symmetric.
(iii) Transitive: If a = 4, b = 0, c = −4, then
a − b = 4 − 0 = 4 < 5 ⇒ aRb
and b − c = 0 − (−4) = 4 < 5 ⇒ bRc
but a − c = 4 − (−4) = 8 ≮ 5 ⇒ aRc
∴ R is not transitive.
⇒ R is not an equivalence relation.
Example 3
Let A = {2, 4, 6, 8} and R be the relation ‘is greater than’ on the set A. Write R as a set of ordered pairs.
- reflexive?
- symmetric?
- equivalence relation?
Justify your answer.
Solution:
Given A = {2, 4, 6, 8} and R is the relation ‘is greater than’ on A, therefore,
R = {(8, 6), (8, 4), (8, 2), (6, 4), (6, 2), (4, 2)}
- R is not reflexive, because (2, 2) ∉ R
- R is not symmetric, because (8, 6) ∈ R but (6, 8) ∉ R
- R is not an equivalence relation, because R is an equivalence relation only when it is reflexive, symmetric and transitive.
However, the above relation is transitive, because if x > y and y > z, then x > z.
Key Points: Equivalence Class and Relation
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An equivalence relation must be reflexive, symmetric, and transitive.
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Equality is a standard example of an equivalence relation.
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Relations like “greater than” or “is mother of” are not equivalence relations because they do not satisfy all three properties.
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Equivalence classes are sets of mutually related elements.
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Equivalence relations and partitions of sets are closely connected.
