Antiisomorphism

Antiisomorphism

In modern algebra, an antiisomorphism (or anti-isomorphism) between structured sets "A" and "B" is an isomorphism from "A" to the opposite of "B" (or equivalently from the opposite of "A" to "B"). If there exists an antiisomorphism between two structures, they are "antiisomorphic."

Intuitively, to say that two algebraic structures are "antiisomorphic" is to say that they are basically opposites of one another.

An example may clarify the idea. Let "A" be the binary relation (or graph) consisting of elements {1,2,3} and binary relation ightarrow defined as follows:
* 1 ightarrow 2;
* 1 ightarrow 3;
* 2 ightarrow 1.

Let "B" be the binary relation set consisting of elements {"a","b","c"} and binary relation Rightarrow defined as follows:
* b Rightarrow a;
* c Rightarrow a;
* a Rightarrow b.

Note that the opposite of "B" (called "B"op) is the same set of elements with the opposite binary relation Leftarrow:
* a Leftarrow b;
* a Leftarrow c;
* b Leftarrow a.

If we replace "a", "b", and "c" with 1, 2, and 3 respectively, we will see that each rule in "B"op is the same as some rule in "A". That is, we can define an isomorphism phi from "A" to "B"op by

phi(n) = egin{cases}a&mbox{if }n=1;\ b&mbox{if }n=2;\ c&mbox{if }n=3.end{cases}

This phi is an antiisomorphism between "A" and "B".


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • List of mathematics articles (A) — NOTOC A A Beautiful Mind A Beautiful Mind (book) A Beautiful Mind (film) A Brief History of Time (film) A Course of Pure Mathematics A curious identity involving binomial coefficients A derivation of the discrete Fourier transform A equivalence A …   Wikipedia

  • Marcel-Paul Schützenberger — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Schutzenberger. Marcel Paul Schützenberger (né le 24 octobre 1920 à Paris, mort le 29 juillet 1996 à Paris) est un scientifique français. Ses recherches ont d abord porté sur la médecine et la biologie, mais il… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”