Power set P(S) with symmetry difference.

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mikael27
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Homework Statement



Determine the orders of all the elements of the power set P(S) of a set S with symmetric difference Δ.

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



If A,b are two elements of the power set
the symmetric difference is

AΔB = (A-B) U (B - A)

How are we going to find the order of the elements?
 
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its A Δ B not A Δ A.

I don't know how to start this
 
mikael27 said:
its A Δ B not A Δ A.

I don't know how to start this

You would if you paid some attention to me. The order of A is the number of times you have to take the symmetric difference of A with itself to get the group identity. What's the identity of your group?
 
the identity is the empty set.
 
I also know that AΔB = (A-B) U (B - A)= (B-A) U (A - B)=BΔA
 
well, that's very nice, but:

in a group, the order of an element g is the smallest possible positive integer k such that gk = e.

what is gk? it's g*g*g*...*g (k times).

so when calculating order of an element, you don't need to look at "other elements".

in the group you are considering, we are using "A" instead of "g", and "Δ" instead of "*".

so Ak = AΔAΔA...ΔA (k times).

there's no need to bring up "B".
 
To the answer is that we have one element A and the order of A is k?
 
it says that the A-A union A-A. On sets if A-A=0 it means it is zero
 
mikael27 said:
it says that the A-A union A-A. On sets if A-A=0 it means it is zero

A-A isn't 0, if you mean the number zero. Do you know what A-A means? It's a set, not a number.
 
can you please explain me
 
yes i know that that's why i told you 0. There are no elements left

{1,2,3,4}-{5,4,2,7} 1,3

{1,2,3,4}-{1,2,3,4} no elements
 
mikael27 said:
yes i know that that's why i told you 0. There are no elements left

{1,2,3,4}-{5,4,2,7} 1,3

{1,2,3,4}-{1,2,3,4} no elements

That's good. 0 isn't a good answer. 'empty set' or {} or ∅ is the way to say that. So A^2={}. What does that tell you about the order of A?
 
so A^2=empty set. no elements from -infinity to + infinity
 
mikael27 said:
so A^2=empty set. no elements from -infinity to + infinity

That has nothing to do with the question I asked you. What does A^2={} tell you about the order of A? What's the identity of P(A)? Try to focus, ok?
 
You said, back in response #5, that "the identity is the empty set."''

Of course, "is" is symmetric! "The empty set is the identity". So, calling the identity "e", [itex]A\Delta A= \phi[/itex] is the same as [itex]A\Delta A= e[/itex].

Now, what does that tell you about the "order" of A?zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
 
mikael27 said:
infinity order

I want to you reread Deveno's explanation in post 8. Look up what the 'order of a element in a group' means in your textbook or on line. Figure out why P(A) is a group under Δ. Then think about it for a while, come back here and explain to me what it means in your own words. Then if you still don't know we can continue.