Let’s look at the two functions above:
m
(
t
)
=
100
t
m
(
t
)
=
100
t
size 12{m \( t \) ="100"t} {}
(1)
t
(
m
)
=
m
/
100
t
(
m
)
=
m
/
100
size 12{t \( m \) =m/"100"} {}
(2)Mathematically, you can recognize these as inverse functions because they reverse the inputs and the outputs.
Table 1
|
3
→
m
(
t
)
=
100
t
→
300
3
→
m
(
t
)
=
100
t
→
300
size 12{3 rightarrow m \( t \) ="100"t rightarrow "300"} {}
|
|
300
→
t
(
m
)
=
m
/
100
→
3
300
→
t
(
m
)
=
m
/
100
→
3
size 12{"300" rightarrow t \( m \) =m/"100" rightarrow 3} {}
|
| ✓✓
Inverse functions
|
Of course, this makes logical sense. The first line above says that “If Alice works 3 hours, she makes $300.” The second line says “If Alice made $300, she worked 3 hours.” It’s the same statement, made in two different ways.
But this “reversal” property gives us a way to test any two functions to see if they are inverses. For instance, consider the two functions:
f
(
x
)
=
3x
+
7
f
(
x
)
=
3x
+
7
size 12{f \( x \) =3x+7} {}
(3)
g
(
x
)
=
1
3
x
−
7
g
(
x
)
=
1
3
x
−
7
size 12{g \( x \) = { { size 8{1} } over { size 8{3} } } x - 7} {}
(4)They look like inverses, don’t they? But let’s test and find out.
Table 2
|
2
→
3x
+
7
→
13
2
→
3x
+
7
→
13
size 12{2 rightarrow 3x+7 rightarrow "13"} {}
|
|
13
→
3x
-
7
→
133
-
7
→
-
83
13
→
3x
-
7
→
133
-
7
→
-
83
size 12{"13" rightarrow 1/3x-7 rightarrow "13"/3-7 rightarrow -8/3 } {}
|
| ✗✗ Not inverse functions
|
The first function turns a 2 into a 13. But the second function does not turn 13 into 2. So these are not inverses.
On the other hand, consider:
f
(
x
)
=
3x
+
7
f
(
x
)
=
3x
+
7
size 12{f \( x \) =3x+7} {}
(5)
g
(
x
)
=
1
3
x
−
7
g
(
x
)
=
1
3
x
−
7
size 12{g \( x \) = { { size 8{1} } over { size 8{3} } } left (x - 7 right )} {}
(6)Let’s run our test of inverses on these two functions.
Table 3
|
2
→
3x
+
7
→
13
2
→
3x
+
7
→
13
size 12{2 rightarrow 3x+7 rightarrow "13"} {}
|
|
13
→
1
3
x
−
7
→
2
13
→
1
3
x
−
7
→
2
size 12{"13" rightarrow { { size 8{1} } over { size 8{3} } } left (x - 7 right ) rightarrow 2} {}
|
| ✓✓ Inverse functions |
So we can see that these functions do, in fact, reverse each other: they are inverses.
A common example is the Celsius-to-Fahrenheit conversion:
F
(
C
)
=
9
5
C
+
32
F
(
C
)
=
9
5
C
+
32
size 12{F \( C \) = left ( { {9} over {5} } right )C+"32"} {}
(7)
C
(
F
)
=
5
9
F
−
32
C
(
F
)
=
5
9
F
−
32
size 12{C \( F \) = left ( { {5} over {9} } right ) left (F - "32" right )} {}
(8)where
CC size 12{C} {} is the Celsius temperature and
FF size 12{F} {} the Fahrenheit. If you plug
100°C100°C size 12{"100"°C} {} into the first equation, you find that it is
212°F212°F size 12{"212"°F} {}. If you ask the second equation about
212°F212°F size 12{"212"°F} {}, it of course converts that back into
100°C100°C size 12{"100"°C} {}.
"DAISY and BRF versions of this collection are available."