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| title | chunk | source | category | tags | date_saved | instance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Complete set of invariants | 1/1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_set_of_invariants | reference | science, encyclopedia | 2026-05-05T07:23:36.291616+00:00 | kb-cron |
In mathematics, a complete set of invariants for a classification problem is a collection of maps
f
i
:
X
→
Y
i
{\displaystyle f_{i}:X\to Y_{i}}
(where
X
{\displaystyle X}
is the collection of objects being classified, up to some equivalence relation
∼
{\displaystyle \sim }
, and the
Y
i
{\displaystyle Y_{i}}
are some sets), such that
x
∼
x
′
{\displaystyle x\sim x'}
if and only if
f
i
(
x
)
=
f
i
(
x
′
)
{\displaystyle f_{i}(x)=f_{i}(x')}
for all
i
{\displaystyle i}
. In words, such that two objects are equivalent if and only if all invariants are equal. Symbolically, a complete set of invariants is a collection of maps such that
(
∏
f
i
)
:
(
X
/
∼
)
→
(
∏
Y
i
)
{\displaystyle \left(\prod f_{i}\right):(X/\sim )\to \left(\prod Y_{i}\right)}
is injective. As invariants are, by definition, equal on equivalent objects, equality of invariants is a necessary condition for equivalence; a complete set of invariants is a set such that equality of these is also sufficient for equivalence. In the context of a group action, this may be stated as: invariants are functions of coinvariants (equivalence classes, orbits), and a complete set of invariants characterizes the coinvariants (is a set of defining equations for the coinvariants).
== Examples == In the classification of two-dimensional closed manifolds, Euler characteristic (or genus) and orientability are a complete set of invariants. The Jordan normal form of a matrix is a complete invariant for matrices over a field up to conjugation (similarity), but eigenvalues (with multiplicities) are not. The elementary divisors are a complete invariant for matrices over a principal ideal domain up to conjugation (or for finitely generated modules over a PID up to isomorphism). The signature and rank of a matrix are a complete set of invariants for real symmetric matrices up to congruence (or for real quadratic forms up to equivalence), by Sylvester's law of inertia.
== Realizability of invariants == A complete set of invariants does not immediately yield a classification theorem: not all combinations of invariants may be realized. Symbolically, one must also determine the image of
∏
f
i
:
X
→
∏
Y
i
.
{\displaystyle \prod f_{i}:X\to \prod Y_{i}.}
== References ==