What is an Image in Abstract Algebra?

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My professor can't give me a straight answer, the word is absent from the appendix of the book, and google search returns nothing.

So my question is, in the context of abstract algebra...

what the heck is an image?

For example...my book says "Note that the image of the unity is the unity of the image but not the unity of Z30."

What does that mean?
 
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Perhaps this will help you. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_(mathematics )
 
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Thanks very much for the quick reply. I'm very surprised that didn't come up in my internet search. Seriously, try searching "image abstract algebra" and see what nonsense comes up. Anyway...

So f(x) is the image of x?

So the image of the unity, is f(1).

The unity of the image is the value of x so that f(x) = 1?

And the unity of Z30 is the elements of Z30 under addition such that when one is added to an element of Z30, the same element is returned? Wouldn't that just be {0, 30}?

Please confirm my assumptions here so I know which way is up.
 
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Under addition, the image of the unity is f(0)?

I don't think I've ever seen unity to refer to zero, only the multiplicative identity

The unity of the image is the value of x so that f(x) = 1 (under multiplication) and f(x) = 0 (under addition)?

It would help if you tell us exactly what the function is. Certainly f(x) can't be both 1 and 0 at the same time though
 
Sorry, you're right. I get unity and identity blurred together sometimes. The multiplicative identity 1. I edited the post to clarify.

The function is the mapping from Z5 to Z30 given by x --> 6x.
 
So what's happening here is that in Z30, the subset {0,6,12,18,24} (the image of the map) is a ring, with 6 the multiplicative identity. But 6 is not the multiplicative identity of Z30
 
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