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W3spoint99
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W3spoint99Begginer
Asked: December 28, 2024In: Math

Types Of Sets (Class 11 – Maths)

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Explain Types Of Sets with Examples.

learn mathematicsmath sets tutorialnull setspower setsset theory basicssets in mathematicssingleton setstypes of setstypes of sets explained
  1. Saralyn
    Saralyn Begginer
    Added an answer on December 28, 2024 at 6:35 am

    Sets are a well-defined collection of objects. Objects that a set contains are called the elements of the set. We can also consider sets as collections of elements that have a common feature. For example, the collection of even numbers is called the set of even numbers. Table of Content What is Set?Read more

    Sets are a well-defined collection of objects. Objects that a set contains are called the elements of the set. We can also consider sets as collections of elements that have a common feature. For example, the collection of even numbers is called the set of even numbers.

    Table of Content

    • What is Set?
    • Types of Sets in Mathematics
      • Singleton Set
      • Empty Set
      • Finite Set
      • Infinite Set
      • Equal Set
      • Equivalent Set
      • Subset
      • Power Set
      • Universal Set 
      • Disjoint Sets
    • Solved Examples on Types of Sets
    • FAQs

    What is Set?

    A well-defined collection of Objects or items or data is known as a set. The objects or data are known as the element. For Example, the boys in a classroom can be put in one set, all integers from 1 to 100 can become one set, and all prime numbers can be called an Infinite set. The symbol used for sets is {…..}. Only the collection of data with specific characteristics is called a set.

    Example: Separate out the collections that can be placed in a set.

    • Beautiful Girls in a class
    • All even numbers
    • Good basketball players
    • Natural numbers divisible by 3
    • Number from 1 to 10

    Answer:

    Anything that tries to define a certain quality or characteristics can not be put in a set. Hence, from the above given Collection of data. 

    The ones that can be a set,

    • All even numbers
    • Natural numbers divisible by 3.
    • Number from 1 to 10

    The ones that cannot be a set,

    • Beautiful girls in the park
    • Good basketball players

    Types of Sets in Mathematics

    Sets are the collection of different elements belonging to the same category and there can be different types of sets seen. A set may have an infinite number of elements, may have no elements at all, may have some elements, may have just one element, and so on. Based on all these different ways, sets are classified into different types.

    The different types of sets are:

    Singleton Set

    Empty Set

    Finite Set

    Infinite Set

    Equal Set

    Equivalent Set

    Subset

    Power Set

    Universal Set 

    Disjoint Sets

    Let’s discuss these various types of sets in detail.

    Singleton Set

    Singleton Sets are those sets that have only 1 element present in them.

    Example: 

    • Set A= {1} is a singleton set as it has only one element, that is, 1.
    • Set P = {a : a is an even prime number} is a singleton set as it has only one element 2.

    Similarly, all the sets that contain only one element are known as Singleton sets.

    Empty Set

    Empty sets are also known as Null sets or Void sets. They are the sets with no element/elements in them. They are denoted as ϕ.

    Example:

    • Set A= {a: a is a number greater than 5 and less than 3}
    • Set B= {p: p are the students studying in class 7 and class 8}

    Finite Set

    Finite Sets are those which have a finite number of elements present, no matter how much they’re increasing number, as long as they are finite in nature, They will be called a Finite set.

    Example: 

    • Set A= {a: a is the whole number less than 20}
    • Set B = {a, b, c, d, e}

    Infinite Set

    Infinite Sets are those that have an infinite number of elements present, cases in which the number of elements is hard to determine are known as infinite sets. 

    Example: 

    • Set A= {a: a is an odd number}
    • Set B = {2,4,6,8,10,12,14,…..}

    Equal Set

    Two sets having the same elements and an equal number of elements are called equal sets. The elements in the set may be rearranged, or they may be repeated, but they will still be equal sets.

    Example:

    • Set A = {1, 2, 6, 5}
    • Set B = {2, 1, 5, 6}

    In the above example, the elements are 1, 2, 5, 6. Therefore, A= B.

    Equivalent Set

    Equivalent Sets are those which have the same number of elements present in them. It is important to note that the elements may be different in both sets but the number of elements present is equal. For Instance, if a set has 6 elements in it, and the other set also has 6 elements present, they are equivalent sets.

    Example:

    Set A= {2, 3, 5, 7, 11}

    Set B = {p, q, r, s, t}

    Set A and Set B both have 5 elements hence, both are equivalent sets.

    Subset

    Set A will be called the Subset of Set B if all the elements present in Set A already belong to Set B. The symbol used for the subset is ⊆

    If A is a Subset of B, It will be written as A ⊆ B

    Example:

    Set A= {33, 66, 99}

    Set B = {22, 11, 33, 99, 66}

    Then, Set A ⊆ Set B 

    Power Set

    Power set of any set A is defined as the set containing all the subsets of set A. It is denoted by the symbol P(A) and read as Power set of A.

    For any set A containing n elements, the total number of subsets formed is 2n. Thus, the power set of A, P(A) has 2n elements.

    Example: For any set A = {a,b,c}, the power set of A is?

    Solution:

    Power Set P(A) is,

    P(A) = {ϕ, {a}, {b}, {c}, {a, b}, {b, c}, {c, a}, {a, b, c}}

    Universal Set 

    A universal set is a set that contains all the elements of the rest of the sets. It can be said that all the sets are the subsets of Universal sets. The universal set is denoted as U.

    Example: For Set A = {a, b, c, d} and Set B = {1,2} find the universal set containing both sets.

    Solution:

    Universal Set U is,

    U = {a, b, c, d, e, 1, 2}

    Disjoint Sets

    For any two sets A and B which do have no common elements are called Disjoint Sets. The intersection of the Disjoint set is ϕ, now for set A and set B A∩B =  ϕ. 

    Example: Check whether Set A ={a, b, c, d} and Set B= {1,2} are disjoint or not.

    Solution:

    Set A ={a, b, c, d}
    Set B= {1,2}

    Here, A∩B =  ϕ

    Thus, Set A and Set B are disjoint sets.

    Also, Check

    • Set Theory
    • Set Theory Symbols
    • Relations and Functions
    • Representation of a Set
    • Operations on Sets

    Summarizing Types of Set

    There are different types of sets categorized on various parameters. Some types of sets are mentioned below:

    Set Name Description Example
    Empty Set A set containing no elements whatsoever. {}
    Singleton Set A set containing exactly one element. {1}
    Finite Set A set with a limited, countable number of elements. {apple, banana, orange}
    Infinite Set A set with an uncountable number of elements. {natural numbers (1, 2, 3, …)}
    Equivalent Sets Sets that have the same number of elements and their elements can be paired one-to-one. Set A = {1, 2, 3} and Set B = {a, b, c} (assuming a corresponds to 1, b to 2, and c to 3)
    Equal Sets Sets that contain exactly the same elements. Set A = {1, 2} and Set B = {1, 2}
    Universal Set A set containing all elements relevant to a specific discussion. The set of all students in a school (when discussing student grades)
    Unequal Sets Sets that do not have all the same elements. Set A = {1, 2, 3} and Set B = {a, b}
    Power Set The set contains all possible subsets of a given set. Power Set of {a, b} = { {}, {a}, {b}, {a, b} }
    Overlapping Sets Sets that share at least one common element. Set A = {1, 2, 3} and Set B = {2, 4, 5}
    Disjoint Sets Sets that have no elements in common. Set A = {1, 2, 3} and Set B = {a, b, c}
    Subset A set where all elements are also members of another set. {1, 2} is a subset of {1, 2, 3}

    Solved Examples on Types of Sets

    Example 1: Represent a universal set on a Venn Diagram.

    Solution:

    Universal Sets are those that contain all the sets in it. In the below given Venn diagram, Set A and B are given as examples for better understanding of Venn Diagram.

    Example:

    Set A= {1,2,3,4,5}, Set B = {1,2, 5, 0}

    U= {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7}

    Universal Set

    Example 2: Which of the given below sets are equal and which are equivalent in nature?

    • Set A= {2, 4, 6, 8, 10}
    • Set B= {a, b, c, d, e}
    • Set C= {c: c ∈ N, c is an even number, c ≤ 10}
    • Set D = {1, 2, 5, 10}
    • Set E= {x, y, z}

    Solution:

    Equivalent sets are those which have the equal number of elements, whereas, Equal sets are those which have the equal number of elements present as well as the elements are same in the set.

    Equivalent Sets = Set A, Set B, Set C.

    Equal Sets = Set A, Set C.

    Example 3: Determine the types of the below-given sets,

    •  Set A= {a: a is the number divisible by 10}
    • Set B = {2, 4, 6}
    • Set C = {p}
    • Set D= {n, m, o, p}
    • Set E= ϕ

    Solution:

    From the knowledge gained above in the article, the above-mentioned sets can easily be identified.

    • Set A is an Infinite set.
    • Set B is a Finite set
    • Set C is a singleton set
    • Set D is a Finite set
    • Set E is a Null set

    Example 4: Explain which of the following sets are subsets of Set P,

    Set P = {0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20}

    • Set A = {a, 1, 0, 2}
    • Set B ={0, 2, 4}
    • Set C = {1, 4, 6, 10}
    • Set D = {2, 20}
    • Set E ={18, 16, 2, 10}

    Solution:

    • Set A has elements a, 1, which are not present in the Set P. Therefore, set A is not a Subset.
    • Set B has elements which are present in set P, Therefore, Set B ⊆ Set P
    • Set C has 1 as an extra element. Hence, not a subset of P
    • Set D has 2, 20 as element. Therefore, Set D ⊆ Set P
    • Set E has all its elements matching the elements of set P. Hence, Set E ⊆ Set P.

    FAQs on Types of Sets

    What are sets?

    Sets are well-defined collections of objects. 

    Example: The collection of Tata cars in the parking lot is a set.

    What are Sub Sets?

    Subsets of any set are defined as sets that contain some elements of the given set. For example, If set A contains some elements of set B set A is called the subset of set B.

    How many types of sets are present?

    Different types of sets used in mathematics are 

    • Empty Set
    • Non-Empty Set
    • Finite Set
    • Infinite Set
    • Singleton Set
    • Equivalent Set
    • Subset
    • Superset
    • Power Set
    • Universal Set

    What is the difference between, ϕ and {ϕ}?

    The difference between ϕ and {ϕ} is

    • ϕ = this symbol is used to represent the null set, therefore, when only this symbol is given, the set is a Null set or empty set.
    • {ϕ}= In this case, the symbol is present inside the brackets used to denote a set, and therefore, now the symbol is acting like an element. Hence, this is a Singleton set.
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Saralyn
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SaralynBegginer
Asked: December 28, 2024In: PHP

php – Laravel GET Route Calling Wrong Class Function

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php – Laravel GET Route Calling Wrong Class Function

The Reason is laravel is treating both as same, for example if you send a request http://127.0.0.1:8000/items/approved http://127.0.0.1:8000/items/1232 Technically it should work as expected but due to laravel wildcard it look for but Laravel interprets ...

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Saralyn
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SaralynBegginer
Asked: December 28, 2024In: PHP

php – how can I get the result of openssl_public_decrypt?

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php – how can I get the result of openssl_public_decrypt?

It’s all about how you’re handling the decrypted data and verifying its type, try this code, I commented every part: PHP_FUNCTION(my_openssl_public_decrypt) { zend_string *data, *public_key; zval func_name, result; zval ...

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Saralyn
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SaralynBegginer
Asked: December 28, 2024In: PHP

WinterCMS PHP renderPartial doesn’t work after jQuery request

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WinterCMS PHP renderPartial doesn’t work after jQuery request

In plugin default.htm {% partial 'companies' %}

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Saralyn
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SaralynBegginer
Asked: December 29, 2024In: PHP

ubuntu – PHP ERROR! symbol lookup error: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libxml2.so.2: undefined symbol: ucnv_close_74

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ubuntu – PHP ERROR! symbol lookup error: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libxml2.so.2: undefined symbol: ucnv_close_74

Im using ubuntu server and after one apt dist-upgrade my nginx stop working! I got the error: 502 Bad Gateway nginx/1.24.0 (Ubuntu) So, i I started to investigate and open the var/log/nginx connect() to unix:/var/run/php/php-fpm.sock failed (2: No such file or directory) while ...

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Saralyn
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SaralynBegginer
Asked: December 29, 2024In: PHP

Target class [admin] does not exist Problem in Laravel Version 11.36.1 and php version 6.2.12

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Target class [admin] does not exist Problem in Laravel Version 11.36.1 and php version 6.2.12

I am trying to create a login system where both admin and users can log in using the same form. The problem is when I log in with admin credentials, the URL redirects correctly to admin/dashboard, but I see ...

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W3spoint99
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W3spoint99Begginer
Asked: December 30, 2024In: Physics

Explain Fundamental Forces in Nature (Class 11 – Physics)

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Explain Fundamental Forces in Nature (Class 11 – Physics) – Notes

cbseclass 11forcesfundamentalnaturephysics
  1. Saralyn
    Saralyn Begginer
    Added an answer on December 30, 2024 at 6:56 am

    Fundamental Forces The most beautiful phenomenon that can be seen in physics is that how universe is so disciplined and synced together. The force has kept the universe bind together. Forces have always played an important role in the human existence, but it is not realized by humans. Human beings cRead more

    Fundamental Forces

    The most beautiful phenomenon that can be seen in physics is that how universe is so disciplined and synced together. The force has kept the universe bind together. Forces have always played an important role in the human existence, but it is not realized by humans. Human beings constantly experience some force acting on them like gravitational force, etc.  There are some forces that naturally exist in the universe, they are known as Fundamental Forces. Let’s learn about them in some detail.

    Force

    Force is an interaction, either with contact or without contact. When there is no opposition given to the Force, It can result in changing the motion, shape, position, of a body. Whenever some interaction occurs between two objects, there is a certain force acting upon them. There are many types of Forces present, For instance, Applied Force, Gravitational Force, Frictional Force, Tension Force, etc.

    Fundamental Forces in nature

    These forces are so well-defined that they cover the macroscopic and microscopic forces present in nature. The forces learned or seen by humans in everyday life, from frictional force, pull, push, thrust, etc. are known as derived forces, and they are not considered the fundamental forces. The derived forces are actually derived from the fundamental forces in some way or the other. Some Fundamental Forces are,

    • Gravitational Force
    • Electromagnetic Force
    • Strong Nuclear Force
    • Weak Nuclear Force

    These above-mentioned forces are responsible for all the observations obtained in forces present in the nature.

    Gravitational Force

    This force exists by the virtue of the masses of any objects. Gravitational force is the mutual force of attraction between two masses. Attraction between any mass and Earth is called Gravity. Isaac Newton first gave the concept of gravity. Gravity is the most intuitive and the weakest force present in nature. The Irony is that Gravity actually holds the planet, Solar system, Entire Universe together, yet it is known to be the weakest force present in nature.

    The Force of Gravitation is given as,

    Formula for Gravitational Force,

    F1=F2=G\frac{M1.M2}{r^2}

    Where, F = Force of Gravitation

    M1, M2 = Masses 1 and 2

    r = Distance between the masses

    G = Gravitational Constant (6.67× 10-11m3kg-1s-2)

    Electromagnetic Force

    Charges when they are at rest exert a force at each other known as the Electric force of attraction/repulsion. Like charges repel each other while unlike charges attract each other. When charges start to move and become dynamic, they develop magnetic field lines around and have magnetic force, these two forces combined are known as Electromagnetic forces present in nature.

    Magnetic force produced by current (moving charge)

    Combining the above two forces which are always perpendicular to each other will give rise to Electromagnetic Force. The force is produced by massless bosons and photons present in the charges, Electromagnetic force exists in nature and is responsible for many derived forces we experience every day, for example, Friction Force, Normal Force, Elasticity, and so on.

    Strong Nuclear Force

    It is the force of attraction between Protons and Neutrons. The force is the same whether protons and protons are present or neutrons and neutrons are present or protons and neutrons are looked at. In short, a Strong nuclear force exists between all nucleons. In short Ranges, this Force is the strongest among all the forces. It is important to note that at a distance of 10-13 cm, this force vanishes.

    Weak Nuclear Force 

    This Force is seen In the β Decay of a nucleus. Scientist named Wolfgang Pauli First predicted a particle named Neutrino. The Neutrino is an uncharged Particle that is released along with the electron in the β Decay process. During β Decay, when Beta Particle is ejected from an Atom, it tends to accelerate away from the atom and some force is required to accelerate the particle known as Weak Nuclear Force. Weak Nuclear Force is stronger than gravitational force but weaker than a strong nuclear force. 

    Table to represent Range and Relative Strength of Different Forces:

    Forces Range Relative strength
    Gravitational Force ∞ 10-38
    Electromagnetic Force ∞ 10-2
    Strong nuclear force < 10-15m 1
    Weak nuclear Force < 10-18m 10-13

    Conceptual Questions

    Question 1: Which Fundamental Force is the strongest and weakest among the fundamental forces present in nature?

    Answer:

    The strongest force present in nature is the Strong Nuclear Force and the weakest force present in nature at atomic scale is Gravity.

    Question 2: Which of the following forces are Fundamental, and which are derived in nature?

    Weak Nuclear Force, Friction Force, Gravity, Elasticity, Electromagnetic Force, Push

    Answer:

    Fundamental Forces ⇢ Weak Nuclear Force, Gravity, Electromagnetic Force.

    Derived Force ⇢ Friction Force, Elasticity, Push.

    Question 3: A statement is being used now “Gravity is not a force” Throw light on this statement.

    Answer:

    Isaac Newton initially discovered Gravity and Gravitational Force. It was then stated that gravity is a Force. Later on, with the help of Theory of Relativity, Einstein stated that Gravity is actually not a force but a result of space-time orientation. It is a consequence of masses moving along a geodesic lines in space time.

    Question 4: If the masses of 2 objects are doubled and the space between them is also doubled. How will the gravitational Force between them change?

    Answer:

    Gravitational Force is given as,

    F_G=G\frac{M_1.M_2}{r^2}

    When, Mass 1 and Mass 2 is doubled, M1’=2M1, M2’=2M2

    Distance between the masses is doubled, r’= 2r

    New Gravitational Force Between them,

    F_G'=G\frac{M_1'.M_2'}{r'^2}=G\frac{2M_1.2M_2}{4r^2} \\=G\frac{M_1.M_2}{r^2}=F_G

    Hence, The new value of gravitational Force will be same as the old Gravitational Force.

    Question 5: What are Pseudo Forces? Give Examples.

    Answer:

    Pseudo Forces are also known as Inertial Force or Fictitious Force. These forces actually do not exist and are the apparent forces that are seen due to fact that they are defined from a non-inertial frame.

    Example: A man sees another man going in a car and realized that some force is acting on the man in the car. This type of force seen is real as it is seen from a non-accelerated or inertial frame. However, the man in the car if looks at the man standing would feel that some force is acted upon the man and he is going backwards, this force is pseudo force, Since this force is seen from a non-inertial frame or an accelerated frame.

    Question 6: Which two forces have infinite range?

    Answer:

    The two fundamental forces having infinite range are Gravitational force and Electromagnetic force.

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