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Bijection vs Isomorphism - What's the difference?

bijection | isomorphism |

As nouns the difference between bijection and isomorphism

is that bijection is a one-to-one correspondence, a function which is both a surjection and an injection while isomorphism is similarity of form.

bijection

Noun

(en noun)
  • (set theory) A one-to-one correspondence, a function which is both a surjection and an injection.
  • * 2002 , Yves Nievergelt, Foundations of Logic and Mathematics , page 214,
  • The present text has defined a set to be finite if and only if there exists a bijection' onto a natural number, and infinite if and only if there does not exist any such ' bijection .
  • * 2007 , C. J. Date, Logic and Databases: The Roots of Relational Theory , page 167,
  • Note in particular that a function is a bijection if and only if it's both an injection and a surjection.
  • * 2013 , William F. Basener, Topology and Its Applications , unnumbered page,
  • The basic idea is that two sets A and B have the same cardinality' if there is a '''bijection''' from A to B. Since the domain and range of the '''bijection''' is not relevant here, we often refer to a '''bijection''' from A to B as a '''bijection between the sets''', or a ' one-to-one correspondence between the elements of the sets.

    Synonyms

    * (function that is both a surjection and an injection) one-to-one correspondence

    isomorphism

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • Similarity of form
  • * 1984 Brigitte Asbach-Schnitker, "Introduction", Mercury or The Secret and Swift Messenger , ISBN 9027232768.
  • The postulated isomorphism between words and things constitutes the characterizing feature of all philosophically based universal languages.
    :
  • (biology) the similarity in form of organisms of different ancestry
  • :
  • (chemistry) the similarity in the crystal structures of similar chemical compounds
  • :
  • * 1874 C. Rammelsberg, "Crystallographic and chemical relations of the natural sulphides, arsenides, and sulpharsenides", The Chemical News and Journal of Physical Science , page 197.
  • :
    The isomorphism' of compounds does not prove the ' isomorphism of their respective constituents.
    :
  • (sociology) the similarity in the structure or processes of different organizations
  • :  2.  A one-to-one correspondence :
  • (group algebra) A bijection f'' such that both ''f'' and its inverse ''f  −1 are homomorphisms, that is, structure-preserving mappings.
  • :
  • (computer science) a one-to-one correspondence between all the elements of two sets, e.g. the instances of two classes, or the records in two datasets
  • :
  • (category theory) A morphism which has an inverse; the composition of the morphism and its inverse yields either one of two identity morphisms (depending on the order of composition).
  • Abbreviations

    * (in category theory) iso