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Question
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A school is organizing a debate competition with participants as speakers S = {S1, S2, S3, S4} and these are judged by judges J = {J1, J2, J3}. Each speaker can be assigned one judge. Let R be a relation from set S to J defined as R = {(x, y): speaker x is judged by judge y, x ∈ S, y ∈ J}.
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Based on the above, answer the following:
- How many relations can be there from S to J? [1]
- A student identifies a function from S to J as f = {(S1, J1), (S2, J2), (S3, J2), (S4, J3)} Check if it is bijective. [1]
- How many one-one functions can be there from set S to set J? [2]
OR - Another student considers a relation R1 = {(S1, S2), (S2, S4)} in set S. Write the minimum ordered pairs to be included in R1 so that R1 is reflexive but not symmetric. [2]
- How many one-one functions can be there from set S to set J? [2]
Case Study
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Solution
(i) Number of relations = 2mn
= 24 ×3
= 212
= 4096
(ii) f = {(S1, J1), (S2, J2), (S3, J2), (S4, J3)} is not one-one as f(S2) = f(S3) = J2 but S2 ≠ S3
∴ Not bijective
(iii) (a) Number of one-one function nPm
= 4P3
= `(4!)/(1!)`
= 24
OR
(iii) (b) R1= {(S1, S2), (S2, S4)}
To make it reflexive but not symmetric, add (S1, S1), (S2, S2), (S4, S4).
∴ Minimum number of ordered pairs = 3
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