Find \(f^{-1}\) for \(f(x)=3x\) on Given Finite Sets
📺 Video Explanation
📝 Question
Let:
\[ A=\{0,-1,-3,2\},\qquad B=\{-9,-3,0,6\} \]
and:
\[ f:A\to B,\qquad f(x)=3x \]
Find:
\[ f^{-1} \]
✅ Solution
🔹 Step 1: Find image of each element of \(A\)
Using:
\[ f(x)=3x \]
We get:
- \(f(0)=0\)
- \(f(-1)=-3\)
- \(f(-3)=-9\)
- \(f(2)=6\)
So:
\[ f=\{(0,0),(-1,-3),(-3,-9),(2,6)\} \]
🔹 Step 2: Check whether inverse exists
All outputs are distinct, so \(f\) is one-one.
Range:
\[ \{-9,-3,0,6\}=B \]
So \(f\) is onto.
Hence:
\[ f \text{ is bijective} \]
Therefore inverse exists.
🔹 Step 3: Write inverse function
To find inverse, interchange each ordered pair:
\[ f^{-1}=\{(0,0),(-3,-1),(-9,-3),(6,2)\} \]
🎯 Final Answer
\[ \boxed{f^{-1}=\{(0,0),(-3,-1),(-9,-3),(6,2)\}} \]
Therefore, inverse exists.
🚀 Exam Shortcut
- Find all output values first
- Check one-one and onto
- Inverse = reverse ordered pairs