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Operator inverse

From AoPSWiki

Suppose we have a binary operation G on a set S, G:S\times S \to S, and suppose this operation has an identity e, so that for every g\in S we have G(e, g) = G(g, e) = g. An inverse to \mathbf g under this operation is an element h \in S such that G(h, g) = G(g, h) = e.


Thus, informally, operating by g is the "opposite" of operating by g-inverse.


If our operation is not commutative, we can talk separately about left inverses and right inverses. A left inverse of g would be some h such that G(h, g) = e, while a right inverse would be some h such that G(g, h) = e.


Uniqueness (under appropriate conditions)

If the operation G is associative and an element has both a right and left inverse, these two inverses are equal.

Proof

Let g be the element with left inverse h and right inverse h', so G(h, g) = G(g, h') = e. Then G(G(h, g), h') = G(e, h') = h', by the properties of e. But by associativity, G(G(h, g), h') = G(h, G(g, h')) = G(h, e) = h, so we do indeed have h = h'.

Corollary

If the operation G is associative, inverses are unique.

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