Group action and equivalence relation

Damidami
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Given a group G acting on a set X we get an equivalence relation R on X by xRy iff x is in the orbit of y.

My question is, does some form of "reciprocal" always work in the following sense: given a set X with an equivalence relation R defined on it, does it always exist some group G with some action over X such that the set of its orbits coincide with the equivalence classes?

I have thoght it, and concluded that for finite sets and groups, the cardinal of G has to be a múltiple of the cardinal of every orbit, but I can't see if it is always possible to construct such group with such an action.

Thanks in advance for any help!
 
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An equivalence relation is the same as a partition of the set into a disjoint union of subsets (the equivalence classes). Let G be the group of bijections from X to itself. Let H be the subset of G which leaves the equivalence classes invariant. Then H is a subgroup, and it acts in the way you want.
 
Hi Vargo,
Thanks for your reply. I think I can see your point.
By the subset of G which leaves the equivalence classes invariant, I think you mean the maximal one with that property (as the trivial susbset of G obviously leaves the classes invariant)
Anyway it's interesting that any equivalence relation can be thought as the result of a group action, so every time I see a quotient space of any kind I can think as the result of some group acting by "gluing" some elements together.
 
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