Congruence Modulo: A B (Mod C) A Is Congruent To B Modulo C
Congruence modulo expresses that two numbers belong to the same equivalence class when divided by a given number. It is written as A ≡ B (mod C), meaning that when A and B are divided by C, they have the same remainder and thus belong to the same slice or equivalence class. Congruence modulo C allows us to express that two numbers will be in the same slice or equivalence class when performing a modulo C operation.
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Congruence Modulo: A B (Mod C) A Is Congruent To B Modulo C
Congruence modulo expresses that two numbers belong to the same equivalence class when divided by a given number. It is written as A ≡ B (mod C), meaning that when A and B are divided by C, they have the same remainder and thus belong to the same slice or equivalence class. Congruence modulo C allows us to express that two numbers will be in the same slice or equivalence class when performing a modulo C operation.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Congruence Modulo
You may see an expression like:
AB (mod C) This says that A is congruent to B modulo C. We will discuss the meaning of congruence modulo by performing a thought experiment with the regular modulo operator. Let's imagine we were calculating mod 5 for all of the integers:
Suppose we labelled 5 slices 0, 1, 2, 3, 4. Then, for each of the
integers, we put it into a slice that matched the value of the integer mod 5. Think of these slices as buckets, which hold a set of numbers. For
example, 26 would go in the slice labelled 1,
because 26 mod 5=1. Above is a figure that shows some integers that we would find in each of the slices. It would be useful to have a way of expressing that numbers belonged in the same slice. (Notice 26 is in the same slice as 1, 6, 11, 16, 21 in above example). A common way of expressing that two values are in the same slice, is to say they are in the same equivalence class. The way we express this mathematically for mod C is: AB (mod C) The above expression is pronounced A is congruent to B modulo C. Examining the expression closer: 1. is the symbol for congruence, which means the values A and B are in the same equivalence class. 2. (mod C) tells us what operation we applied to A and B. 3. when we have both of these, we call congruence modulo C. e.g. 2611 (mod 5) 26 mod 5=1 so it is in the equivalence class for 1, 11 mod 5=1 so it is in the equivalence class for 1,