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Identity (mathematics)

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For other senses of this word, see identity (disambiguation).
In mathematics, the term identity has several important uses:

Examples

A common example of the first meaning is the trigonometric identity
[( \sin \theta)^2 + ( \cos \theta)^2 = 1,\,]
which is true for all real values of [\theta] (since the real numbers [\Bbb] are the domain of sin and cos), as opposed to
[\cos \theta = 1,\,]
which is true only for values of [\theta] in a subset of the domain.

A common example of an identity element is the number 0 among the real numbers under addition. This means that, for all [a\in\Bbb,]

[0 + a = a,\,]
[a + 0 = a,\,] and
[0 + 0 = 0.\,]
A common example of an identity function is the identity permutation, which sends each element of the set [\] to itself.

These meanings are not mutually exclusive; for instance, the identity permutation is the identity element in the set of permutations of [\] under composition.

See also list of mathematical identities.

 


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