Antisymmetric relation

   

In mathematics, a binary relation R over a set X is antisymmetric if it holds for all a and b in X that if a is related to b and b is related to a then a = b.

In notation, this is:

<math>\forall a, b \in X,\ a R b \and b R a \; \Rightarrow \; a = b<math>

Strict inequality is antisymmetric; since a < b and b < a is impossible, the antisymmetry condition is vacuously true.

Note that antisymmetry is not the opposite of symmetry (aRb implies bRa). There are relations which are both symmetric and antisymmetric (equality), relations which are neither symmetric nor antisymmetric (divisibility on the integers), relations which are symmetric and not antisymmetric (congruence modulo n), and relations which are not symmetric but anti-symmetric ("is less than" ).

As noted above the condition of antisymmetry of "is less than" is vacuously true. The relation "is less than or equal to" is not symmetric but is antisymmetric, and the antisymmetric condition is not vacuous.

An antisymmetric relation that is also transitive and reflexive is a partial order.


es:Relación antisimétrica pl:Relacja antysymetryczna

Retrieved from "http://www.mywiseowl.com/articles/Antisymmetric_relation"

This page has been accessed 408 times. This page was last modified 01:58, 17 Nov 2004. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see Copyrights for details).