Equivalence Relation - Generating Equivalence Relations

Generating Equivalence Relations

  • Given any set X, there is an equivalence relation over the set of all possible functions XX. Two such functions are deemed equivalent when their respective sets of fixpoints have the same cardinality, corresponding to cycles of length one in a permutation. Functions equivalent in this manner form an equivalence class on, and these equivalence classes partition .
  • An equivalence relation ~ on X is the equivalence kernel of its surjective projection π : XX/~. Conversely, any surjection between sets determines a partition on its domain, the set of preimages of singletons in the codomain. Thus an equivalence relation over X, a partition of X, and a projection whose domain is X, are three equivalent ways of specifying the same thing.
  • The intersection of any collection of equivalence relations over X (viewed as a subset of X × X) is also an equivalence relation. This yields a convenient way of generating an equivalence relation: given any binary relation R on X, the equivalence relation generated by R is the smallest equivalence relation containing R. Concretely, R generates the equivalence relation a ~ b if and only if there exist elements x1, x2, ..., xn in X such that a = x1, b = xn, and (xi,xi+ 1)∈R or (xi+1,xi)∈R, i = 1, ..., n-1.
Note that 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, because x ~ y for all x and y;
  • Any subset of the identity relation on X has equivalence classes that are the singletons of X.
  • Equivalence relations can construct new spaces by "gluing things together." Let X be the unit Cartesian square ×, and let ~ be the equivalence relation on X defined by ∀a, b ∈ ((a, 0) ~ (a, 1) ∧ (0, b) ~ (1, b)). Then the quotient space X/~ can be naturally identified with a torus: take a square piece of paper, bend and glue together the upper and lower edge to form a cylinder, then bend the resulting cylinder so as to glue together its two open ends, resulting in a torus.

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