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Posted

Ok. Let's say that there is a given function y=f(x)

And if your inverse of f(x) is exactly the same as f(x). What can you say about the symmetry of the graph of f(x)?

Posted
Ok. Let's say that there is a given function y=f(x)

And if your inverse of f(x) is exactly the same as f(x). What can you say about the symmetry of the graph of f(x)?

When you say "inverse" do you mean y = 1/f(x) or (1/y) = f(x)?
Posted

the original equation is y=f(x)

 

but the inverse, which is supposedly suppose to reflect in the y=x line, happens to be y=f(x)

Posted

No, the inverse function is not 1/f.

 

If f is its own inverse (NOT RECIPROCAL) and you know the graph of f inverse is the graph of f reflected in the line y=x, then surely you can see that the graph of f must be unchanged afer reflection in that line.

Posted
No' date=' the inverse function is not 1/f.

 

If f is its own inverse (NOT RECIPROCAL) and you know the graph of f inverse is the graph of f reflected in the line y=x, then surely you can see that the graph of f must be unchanged afer reflection in that line.[/quote']

 

I'm not really sure of f inverse means 1/f. I don't really get you. Because apparently, the graph is not reflected that all.

 

Try this eqn.

 

y= (3x+11)/(x-3) , x is not 3.

 

if you find its inverse. You would get the exact same eqn.

Posted

If a function is self inverse then its graph is invariant under reflection in the line y=x. That IS the answer to your question.

 

And for whoeever said that f(x)=x is the only self inverse function, can I suggest f(x)=-x, or f(x)=1-x, or how about f(x)=2-x. Spotting a pattern? What about all the graphs of these? They're all invariant under reflection in the line y=x.

Posted

 

And for whoeever said that f(x)=x is the only self inverse function' date=' can I suggest f(x)=-x, or f(x)=1-x, or how about f(x)=2-x. Spotting a pattern? What about all the graphs of these? They're all invariant under reflection in the line y=x.[/quote']oops sorry mate. i just remember doing group isomorphisms, and something about identity maps being self inverse, so i assumed (hastily) that it was the only one with that property

Posted

The set of maps from R to R isn't a group under composition though, and even if it were there are still elements that square to the identity (if G is finite and |G| is even there are always non-identity elements that square to the identity).

Posted

Well, why take my word for it? Let's prove it: if f(x) = 1 for all x, what is f^{-1}, the nominal inverse function? A function is invertible iff it is bijective. So obviously it fails to be a group.

 

If G is a finite group with even order, let S be a Sylow 2 subgroup. Let v be any non-identity element in S, then v has even order, say 2*r for some r. Then v^r has order 2.

Posted

Ah, that makes it a little harder then. Let G be any group, and suppose |G|=m.p^r, where p is a prime, and p doesn't divide m. Then G has a subgroup of order p^r called the Sylow p-subgroup. In fact it has potentially several of them, but the number of them satisfies a rule I can't recall precisely, they're all conjugate, and any subgroup of order p^s for some s is contained in some Sylow subgroup.

Posted

It is very strong, and very useful, though from what I recall it also doesn't have a proof that's at all worth memorizing, but it turns out to be very important in lots of areas.

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