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Encyclopedia > Onto

In mathematics, a surjective function (or onto function or surjection) is a function with the property that all possible output values of the function are generated when the input ranges over all the values in the domain.


More formally, a function fX → Y is surjective if, for every y in the codomain Y, there is at least one x in the domain X with f(x) = y. Put another way, f is surjective if its range f(X) is equal to the codomain Y, or equivalently, if every element in the codomain has a preimage.

Image:bijMap.png

Bijective (injective and surjective)

Image:mathmap.png

Injective, not surjective

Image:ontoMap.png

Surjective, not injective

Image:mathmap2.png

Not surjective, not injective

.


Examples and counterexamples

On the other hand, the function gR → R defined by g(x) = x2 is not surjective, because (for example) there is no real number x such that x2 = −1.


However, if we define the function hR → [0, ∞) by the same formula as g, but with the codomain restricted to only the nonnegative real numbers, then the function h is surjective. This is because, given an arbitrary nonnegative real number y, we can solve y = x2 to get solutions x = √y and x = −√y.


Properties

  • A function fX → Y is surjective if and only if there exists a function gY → X such that f o g equals the identity function on Y. (This statement is equivalent to the axiom of choice.)
  • By definition, a function is bijective if and only if it is both surjective and injective.
  • If f o g is surjective, then f is surjective.
  • If f and g are both surjective, then f o g is surjective.
  • fX → Y is surjective if and only if, given any functions g,h:Y → Z, whenever g o f = h o f, then g = h. In other words, surjective functions are precisely the epimorphisms in the category Set of sets.
  • If fX → Y is surjective and B is a subset of Y, then f(f −1(B)) = B. Thus, B can be recovered from its preimage f −1(B).
  • Every function hX → Z can be decomposed as h = g o f for a suitable surjection f and injection g. This decomposition is unique up to isomorphism, and f may be thought of as a function with the same values as h but with its codomain restricted to the range h(W) of h, which is only a subset of the codomain Z of h.
  • If fX → Y is a surjective function, then X has at least as many elements as Y, in the sense of cardinal numbers. (This statement is also equivalent to the axiom of choice.)
  • If both X and Y are finite with the same number of elements, then f : X → Y is surjective if and only if f is injective.

See also

Injective function, Bijection


  Results from FactBites:
 
ms3 (6703 words)
The Ontos was a relatively light weight tracked armored fighting vehicle that was designed in the early 1950's to destroy the main battle tanks of this era using the firepower from its six 106mm recoilless rifles.
The Ontos was not a good place to be if you hit a mine I took a lot of small arms fire from all sides and the sloped plates combined with all the extra junk we carried helped deflect a lot of rounds or softened the blow.
When the Ontos were working in groups in a confined area, the crews had to watch that a backblast from one Ontos didn't kill a loader from another Ontos reloading outside his machine.
Ontos - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1166 words)
The Ontos, officially the Rifle, Multiple 106 mm, Self-propelled, M50, was a light anti-tank vehicle developed in the US in the 1950s.
The US Marines were the only force to use the Ontos operationally, and although their crews consistently reported excellent results against infantry during the Vietnam War, the Ontos was always considered an "ugly duckling" and was removed from service in 1969.
The Ontos (Greek for "the thing") project was created to be an air transportable tank-destroyer capable of being lifted by the cargo aircraft of the 1950s.
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