Show \(g^{-1}\) Exists but \(f^{-1}\) Does Not Exist and Find \(g^{-1}\)

📝 Question

Let:

\[ A=\{x\in \mathbb{R} \mid -1 \le x \le 1\} \]

Define functions:

\[ f:A\to A,\quad f(x)=x^2 \]

\[ g:A\to A,\quad g(x)=\sin\left(\frac{\pi x}{2}\right) \]

Show that \(g^{-1}\) exists but \(f^{-1}\) does not exist. Also find \(g^{-1}\).


✅ Solution

🔹 Step 1: Check invertibility of \(f(x)=x^2\)

Take:

\[ f(1)=1,\quad f(-1)=1 \]

Since different inputs give the same output, \(f\) is not one-one.

Hence, \(f^{-1}\) does not exist.


🔹 Step 2: Check invertibility of \(g(x)=\sin\left(\frac{\pi x}{2}\right)\)

The function \(\sin\left(\frac{\pi x}{2}\right)\) is strictly increasing on \([-1,1]\).

Also,

\[ g(-1)=-1,\quad g(1)=1 \]

So range is \([-1,1]\).

Thus, \(g\) is one-one and onto.

Hence, \(g^{-1}\) exists.


🔹 Step 3: Find \(g^{-1}\)

Let:

\[ y=\sin\left(\frac{\pi x}{2}\right) \]

Take inverse sine:

\[ \frac{\pi x}{2}=\sin^{-1}(y) \]

\[ x=\frac{2}{\pi}\sin^{-1}(y) \]

Interchanging \(x\) and \(y\):

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🎯 Final Answer

\[ \boxed{f^{-1} \text{ does not exist}} \]

\[ \boxed{g^{-1}(x)=\frac{2}{\pi}\sin^{-1}(x)} \]


🚀 Exam Shortcut

  • Check injectivity: \(x^2\) fails since \(f(-x)=f(x)\)
  • \(\sin x\) is increasing on restricted interval ⇒ invertible
  • Apply inverse sine and solve directly
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