In mathematics, the image of a function is the set of all output values it may produce.
More generally, evaluating a given function
at each element of a given subset
of its domain produces a set, called the "image of
under (or through)
". Similarly, the inverse image (or preimage) of a given subset
of the codomain of
, is the set of all elements of the domain that map to the members of
.
Image and inverse image may also be defined for general binary relations, not just functions.
Definition
The word "image" is used in three related ways. In these definitions,
is a function from the set
to the set
.
Image of an element
If
is a member of
, then the image of
under
, denoted
, is the value of
when applied to
.
is alternatively known as the output of
for argument
.
Given
, the function
is said to "take the value
" or "take
as a value" if there exists some
in the function's domain such that
. Similarly, given a set
,
is said to "take a value in
" if there exists some
in the function's domain such that
. However, "
takes all values in
" and "
is valued in
" means that
for every point
in
's domain.
Image of a subset
The image of a subset
under
, denoted
, is the subset of
which can be defined using set-builder notation as follows:
![{\displaystyle f[A]=\{f(x):x\in A\}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/cf4b9c6ac81a9d38bc31dee17c34776a98bdf67c)
When there is no risk of confusion,
is simply written as
. This convention is a common one; the intended meaning must be inferred from the context. This makes
a function whose domain is the power set of
(the set of all subsets of
), and whose codomain is the power set of
.
Image of a function
The image of a function is the image of its entire domain, also known as the range of the function. This usage should be avoided because the word "range" is also commonly used to mean the codomain of {\displaystyle f.}f.
Generalization to binary relations
If
is an arbitrary binary relation on
, then the set
is called the image, or the range, of
. Dually, the set
is called the domain of
.
Inverse image of a function
Let
be a function from
to
The preimage or inverse image of a set
under
denoted by
is the subset of
defined by
Other notations include
and
The inverse image of a singleton set, denoted by
or by
is also called the fiber or fiber over
or the level set of
The set of all the fibers over the elements of
is a family of sets indexed by
For example, for the function
the inverse image of
would be
Again, if there is no risk of confusion,
can be denoted by
and
can also be thought of as a function from the power set of
to the power set of
The notation
should not be confused with that for inverse function, although it coincides with the usual one for bijections in that the inverse image of
under
is the image of
under
Examples
1.
defined by
- The image of the set
under
is
The image of the function
is
The preimage of
is
The preimage of
is also
The preimage of
is the empty set 
2.
defined by
- The image of
under
is
and the image of
is
(the set of all positive real numbers and zero). The preimage of
under
is
The preimage of set
under
is the empty set, because the negative numbers do not have square roots in the set of reals.
3.
defined by
- The fiber
are concentric circles]] about the origin, the origin itself, and the empty set, depending on whether
respectively. (if
then the fiber
is the set of all
satisfying the equation of the origin-concentric ring
)
4. If
is a manifold and
is the canonical projection from the tangent bundle
to
then the fibers of
are the tangent spaces
This is also an example of a fiber bundle.
5. A quotient group is a homomorphic image.
Properties


General
For every function
and all subsets
and
the following properties hold:
Image
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Preimage
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 (equal if for instance, if is surjective)
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Also:

Multiple functions
For functions
and
with subsets
and
the following properties hold:


Multiple subsets of domain or codomain
For function
and subsets
and
the following properties hold:
Image
|
Preimage
|
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 (equal if is injective)
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The results relating images and preimages to the (Boolean) algebra of intersection and union work for any collection of subsets, not just for pairs of subsets:




(Here,
can be infinite, even uncountably infinite.)
With respect to the algebra of subsets described above, the inverse image function is a lattice homomorphism, while the image function is only a semilattice homomorphism (that is, it does not always preserve intersections).
Licensing
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