I'm not sure if this is the right forum for this question, this may be taught in calculus but I'm not sure.
Let X = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}. Define a relation R on X x X by (a,b)R(c,d) if ad=bc. Show that R is an equivalence relation on X x X. List one member of each equivalence class of X x X given by relation R. Describe the relation R in familiar terms.
Now, I'm a bit confused about some of this. First of all, is each element of the relation R supposed to be a pair of ordered pairs? Like ((1,2),(1,2))? Also, if that's the case, then i have to show that it's an equivalence relation, so i have to show reflexivity, symmetry, and transitivity. If it's pairs of ordered pairs, I can do the reflexive part, like ((1,1),(1,1)) , ((2,2),(2,2)) is that right? How am I supposed to find all the elements that satisfy (a,b)R(c,d) and satisfy the equivalency relation requirements? I've tried listing all the cartesian products of X x X and trying to find all the relations that satisfy the rule, and then trying to find ones that are symmetrical, transitive etc., but it's taking forever. Is there some kind of trick or pattern that I'm missing? Or am I being too specific and supposed to do this in a more abstract way? Thanks in advance for any help
Let X = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}. Define a relation R on X x X by (a,b)R(c,d) if ad=bc. Show that R is an equivalence relation on X x X. List one member of each equivalence class of X x X given by relation R. Describe the relation R in familiar terms.
Now, I'm a bit confused about some of this. First of all, is each element of the relation R supposed to be a pair of ordered pairs? Like ((1,2),(1,2))? Also, if that's the case, then i have to show that it's an equivalence relation, so i have to show reflexivity, symmetry, and transitivity. If it's pairs of ordered pairs, I can do the reflexive part, like ((1,1),(1,1)) , ((2,2),(2,2)) is that right? How am I supposed to find all the elements that satisfy (a,b)R(c,d) and satisfy the equivalency relation requirements? I've tried listing all the cartesian products of X x X and trying to find all the relations that satisfy the rule, and then trying to find ones that are symmetrical, transitive etc., but it's taking forever. Is there some kind of trick or pattern that I'm missing? Or am I being too specific and supposed to do this in a more abstract way? Thanks in advance for any help