Surjective function

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A surjective function.
A surjective function.
Another surjective function.
Another surjective function.
A non-surjective function.
A non-surjective function.
Surjective composition: the first function need not be surjective.
Surjective composition: the first function need not be surjective.

In mathematics, a function f is said to be surjective if its values span its whole codomain; that is, for every y in the codomain, there is at least one x in the domain such that f(x) = y .

Said another way, a function fX → Y is surjective if and only if its range f(X) is equal to its codomain Y. A surjective function is called a surjection, and also said to be onto.

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  • For any set X, the identity function idX on X is surjective.
  • The function fR → R defined by f(x) = 2x + 1 is surjective, because for every real number y we have f(x) = y where x is (y - 1)/2.
  • The natural logarithm function ln: (0,+∞) → R is surjective.
  • The function fZ → {0,1,2,3} defined by f(x) = x mod 4 is surjective.
  • 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 the codomain is defined as [0,+∞), then g is surjective.

Every function with a right inverse is a surjection. The converse is equivalent to the axiom of choice. That is, assuming choice, a function fX → Y is surjective if and only if there exists a function gY → X such that, for every y \in Y

f(g(y)) = y \, (g can be undone by f)

that is a function g such that f o g equals the identity function on Y (cf. with definition of inverse function).

Note that g may not be a complete inverse of f because the composition in the other order, g o f, may not be the identity on X. In other words, f can undo or "reverse" g, but not necessarily can be reversed by it. Surjections are not always invertible (bijective).

For example, in the first illustration, there is some function g such that g(C) = 4. There is also some function f such that f(4) = C. It doesn't matter that g(C) can also equal 3; it only matters that f "reverses" g.

  • If f and g are both surjective, then f o g is surjective.
  • If f o g is surjective, then f is surjective (but g may not be).
  • 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).
  • For any function hX → Z there exists a surjection f:X → Y and injection g:Y → Z such that h = g o f. To see this, define Y to be the sets h −1(z) where z is in Z. These sets are disjoint and partition X. Then f carries each x to the element of Y which contains it, and g carries each element of Y to the point in Z to which h sends its points. Then f is surjective since it is a projection map, and g is injective by definition.
  • By collapsing all arguments mapping to a given fixed image, every surjection induces a bijection defined on a quotient of its domain. More precisely, every surjection f : AB can be factored as a projection followed by a bijection as follows. Let A/~ be the equivalence classes of A under the following equivalence relation: x ~ y if and only if f(x) = f(y). Equivalently, A/~ is the set of all preimages under f. Let P(~) : AA/~ be the projection map which sends each x in A to its equivalence class [x]~, and let fP : A/~ → B be the well-defined function given by fP([x]~) = f(x). Then f = fP o P(~).
  • If fX → Y is a surjective function, then X has at least as many elements as Y, in the sense of cardinal numbers.
  • 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.

Look up surjective, surjection, onto in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

In the language of category theory, surjective functions are precisely the epimorphisms in the category of sets.

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