Sets
Himachal Pradesh Board · Class 11 · Mathematics
NCERT Solutions for Sets — Himachal Pradesh Board Class 11 Mathematics.
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Exercise 1.1
1Which of the following are sets? Justify your answer.
(i) The collection of all the months of a year beginning with the letter J.
(ii) The collection of ten most talented writers of India.
(iii) A team of eleven best-cricket batsmen of the world.
(iv) The collection of all boys in your class.
(v) The collection of all natural numbers less than 100.
(vi) A collection of novels written by the writer Munshi Prem Chand.
(vii) The collection of all even integers.
(viii) The collection of questions in this Chapter.
(ix) A collection of most dangerous animals of the world.Show solution
(i) Yes, it is a set. The months of a year beginning with 'J' are January, June, and July — clearly and unambiguously defined. So this is a set: {January, June, July}.
(ii) No, it is not a set. The term 'most talented' is subjective and varies from person to person. There is no definite criterion, so the collection is not well-defined.
(iii) No, it is not a set. The term 'best-cricket batsmen' is subjective. Different selectors may choose different players, so the collection is not well-defined.
(iv) Yes, it is a set. The collection of all boys in your class is well-defined — for any boy, it can be determined whether he belongs to your class or not.
(v) Yes, it is a set. The natural numbers less than 100 are precisely 1, 2, 3, …, 99. This is a well-defined collection.
(vi) Yes, it is a set. The novels written by Munshi Prem Chand are well-defined — one can verify whether a given novel was written by him or not.
(vii) Yes, it is a set. Even integers are well-defined: …, −4, −2, 0, 2, 4, … There is no ambiguity.
(viii) Yes, it is a set. The questions in this chapter are fixed and well-defined.
(ix) No, it is not a set. The term 'most dangerous' is subjective and not well-defined. Different people may have different opinions.
2Let . Insert the appropriate symbol or in the blank spaces:
(i) 5 ... A
(ii) 8 ... A
(iii) 0 ... A
(iv) 4 ... A
(v) 2 ... A
(vi) 10 ... AShow solution
We check whether each number belongs to A or not:
(i) — since 5 is an element of A.
(ii) — since 8 is not an element of A.
(iii) — since 0 is not an element of A.
(iv) — since 4 is an element of A.
(v) — since 2 is an element of A.
(vi) — since 10 is not an element of A.
3Write the following sets in roster form:
(i) A = \{x : x \text{ is an integer and } -3 \leq x < 7\}
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v) The set of all letters in the word TRIGONOMETRY
(vi) The set of all letters in the word BETTERShow solution
(ii) The natural numbers less than 6 are: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
(iii) Two-digit natural numbers whose digits sum to 8:
- 17 (1+7=8), 26 (2+6=8), 35 (3+5=8), 44 (4+4=8), 53 (5+3=8), 62 (6+2=8), 71 (7+1=8), 80 (8+0=8)
(iv) . The prime divisors of 60 are 2, 3, and 5.
(v) The word TRIGONOMETRY has letters: T, R, I, G, O, N, O, M, E, T, R, Y. Removing repetitions:
(vi) The word BETTER has letters: B, E, T, T, E, R. Removing repetitions:
4Write the following sets in the set-builder form:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v) Show solution
(ii) The elements 2, 4, 8, 16, 32 are powers of 2: .
(iii) The elements 5, 25, 125, 625 are powers of 5: .
(iv) The elements 2, 4, 6, … are all positive even integers.
or equivalently .
(v) The elements 1, 4, 9, …, 100 are perfect squares of natural numbers from 1 to 10.
5List all the elements of the following sets:
(i)
(ii) B = \{x : x \text{ is an integer, } -\frac{1}{2} < x < \frac{9}{2}\}
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi) Show solution
This is an infinite set.
(ii) We need integers such that -\frac{1}{2} < x < \frac{9}{2}, i.e., -0.5 < x < 4.5.
The integers in this range are: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4.
(iii) We need integers such that , i.e., .
The integers are: .
(iv) The letters in the word LOYAL are L, O, Y, A, L. Removing repetition:
(v) Months not having 31 days: February (28/29 days), April (30), June (30), September (30), November (30).
(vi) Consonants in the English alphabet that precede k (i.e., come before k):
The letters before k are: a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j. Among these, the consonants are b, c, d, f, g, h, j.
6Match each of the set on the left in the roster form with the same set on the right described in set-builder form:
(i) — (a)
(ii) — (b)
(iii) — (c)
(iv) — (d) Show solution
(i) : These are all the natural number divisors of 6 (since ). This matches (c).
(ii) : These are the prime numbers that are also divisors of 6. This matches (a).
(iii) : The word MATHEMATICS has letters M, A, T, H, E, M, A, T, I, C, S. Removing repetitions gives . This matches (d).
(iv) : These are the odd natural numbers less than 10. This matches (b).
Summary: (i) → (c), (ii) → (a), (iii) → (d), (iv) → (b).
Exercise 1.2
1Which of the following are examples of the null set?
(i) Set of odd natural numbers divisible by 2
(ii) Set of even prime numbers
(iii) \{x : x \text{ is a natural number}, x < 5 \text{ and } x > 7\}
(iv) Show solution
(i) Null set. No odd natural number is divisible by 2 (odd and even are mutually exclusive). So this set has no elements: it is a null set.
(ii) Not a null set. The number 2 is an even prime number. So this set = {2}, which is non-empty.
(iii) Null set. There is no natural number that is simultaneously less than 5 and greater than 7. So this set has no elements.
(iv) Null set. Two parallel lines never intersect, so they have no common point. This set is empty.
2Which of the following sets are finite or infinite?
(i) The set of months of a year
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) The set of positive integers greater than 100
(v) The set of prime numbers less than 99Show solution
(ii) Infinite. The set of all natural numbers has no last element; it is infinite.
(iii) Finite. The set contains exactly 100 elements.
(iv) Infinite. The positive integers greater than 100 are 101, 102, 103, … — there is no end, so the set is infinite.
(v) Finite. There are finitely many prime numbers less than 99 (in fact, 24 such primes).
3State whether each of the following set is finite or infinite:
(i) The set of lines which are parallel to the -axis
(ii) The set of letters in the English alphabet
(iii) The set of numbers which are multiple of 5
(iv) The set of animals living on the earth
(v) The set of circles passing through the origin (0,0)Show solution
(ii) Finite. The English alphabet has exactly 26 letters.
(iii) Infinite. Multiples of 5 are 5, 10, 15, 20, … — this list never ends, so the set is infinite.
(iv) Finite. Although the number is very large, the number of animals living on earth at any given time is a definite (finite) number.
(v) Infinite. Infinitely many circles can pass through the origin (they can have any centre and the radius is determined by the centre's distance from the origin). So this set is infinite.
4In the following, state whether or not:
(i) ,
(ii) ,
(iii) ,
(iv) , Show solution
(i) and . Both sets contain exactly the same elements a, b, c, d (order does not matter in sets). Therefore, .
(ii) and . The element 12 is in A but not in B, and 18 is in B but not in A. Therefore, .
(iii) . This is the same as A. Therefore, .
(iv) (multiples of 10) and (multiples of 5). The element 15 is in B but not in A (since 15 is not a multiple of 10). Therefore, .
5Are the following pair of sets equal? Give reasons.
(i) ,
(ii) , Show solution
So .
But . Since and , we have . The sets are not equal.
(ii) Letters in FOLLOW: F, O, L, L, O, W → removing repetitions: .
Letters in WOLF: W, O, L, F → .
Both sets contain exactly the same elements F, O, L, W. Therefore, . The sets are equal.
6From the sets given below, select equal sets:
, , , ,
, , , Show solution
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Comparing:
- and → .
- and → .
- No other pairs are equal (A ≠ C since 8, 12 ∈ A but 14 ∉ A; F and H differ from all others).
Equal sets: and .
Exercise 1.3
1Make correct statements by filling in the symbols or in the blank spaces:
(i)
(ii)
(iii) is a student of Class XI of your school is a student of your school
(iv) is a circle in the plane is a circle in the same plane with radius 1 unit
(v) is a triangle in a plane is a rectangle in the plane
(vi) is an equilateral triangle in a plane is a triangle in the same plane
(vii) is an even natural number is an integerShow solution
(i) Every element of is in .
(ii) but .
(iii) Every Class XI student of your school is also a student of your school.
(iv) A circle in the plane need not have radius 1 unit. So not every circle belongs to the second set.
(v) A triangle is not a rectangle, so no triangle belongs to the set of rectangles.
(vi) Every equilateral triangle is a triangle.
(vii) Every even natural number is an integer.
2Examine whether the following statements are true or false:
(i)
(ii) is a vowel in the English alphabet
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi) is an even natural number less than is a natural number which divides Show solution
(ii) : The vowels are a, e, i, o, u. Both and are vowels. So the statement is True.
(iii) : The element but . So the statement is False.
(iv) : The only element of is , and . So the statement is True.
(v) : The elements of are , , — these are individual letters, not sets. The set is not an element of . So the statement is False.
(vi) Even natural numbers less than 6: . Natural numbers that divide 36: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, 36. Both 2 and 4 divide 36. So . The statement is True.
3Let . Which of the following statements are incorrect and why?
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
(vii)
(ix)
(x)
(xi) Show solution
(i) : For this to be true, both 3 and 4 must be elements of A. But 3 and 4 are not elements of A (only as a whole is). Incorrect. The correct statement is .
(ii) : The set is indeed one of the elements of A. Correct.
(iii) : The only element of is , and . So . Correct.
(iv) : 1 is an element of A. Correct.
(v) : The symbol is used between sets. 1 is an element (not a set), so writing is incorrect. Incorrect. The correct statement is .
(vi) : Elements 1, 2, 5 all belong to A. Correct.
(vii) : The element 3 is not in A (only is). Incorrect.
(ix) : The empty set is not listed as an element of A. Incorrect.
(x) : The empty set is a subset of every set. Correct.
(xi) : For this, must be an element of A. But . Incorrect.
4Write down all the subsets of the following sets:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) Show solution
(i) has 1 element, so subsets:
(ii) has 2 elements, so subsets:
(iii) has 3 elements, so subsets:
(iv) has 0 elements, so subset:
(The empty set is the only subset of itself.)
5Write the following as intervals:
(i) \{x : x \in \mathbb{R}, -4 < x \leq 6\}
(ii) \{x : x \in \mathbb{R}, -12 < x < -10\}
(iii) \{x : x \in \mathbb{R}, 0 \leq x < 7\}
(iv) Show solution
(i) -4 < x \leq 6 means is greater than (not included) and at most 6 (included):
(ii) -12 < x < -10 means both endpoints are excluded:
(iii) 0 \leq x < 7 means 0 is included and 7 is excluded:
(iv) means both endpoints are included:
6Write the following intervals in set-builder form:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) Show solution
\{x : x \in \mathbb{R},\ -3 < x < 0\}
(ii) means all real numbers from 6 to 12, both included:
(iii) means 6 is excluded and 12 is included:
\{x : x \in \mathbb{R},\ 6 < x \leq 12\}
(iv) means is included and 5 is excluded:
\{x : x \in \mathbb{R},\ -23 \leq x < 5\}
7What universal set(s) would you propose for each of the following:
(i) The set of right triangles.
(ii) The set of isosceles triangles.Show solution
(i) For the set of right triangles, a suitable universal set is:
or more broadly, the set of all polygons in a plane.
(ii) For the set of isosceles triangles, a suitable universal set is:
or more broadly, the set of all polygons in a plane.
In both cases, the set of all triangles in a plane serves as a natural universal set.
8Given the sets , and , which of the following may be considered as universal set(s) for all the three sets A, B and C:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) Show solution
, , .
All elements needed: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8.
(i) : The element but . So this cannot be a universal set.
(ii) : The empty set contains no elements, so A, B, C cannot be subsets of it. Cannot be a universal set.
(iii) : Contains 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,8 — all required elements. , , . Can be a universal set. ✓
(iv) : The element but . Cannot be a universal set.
Answer: Only (iii) can be considered as a universal set for A, B and C.
Exercise 1.4
1Find the union of each of the following pairs of sets:
(i) ,
(ii) ,
(iii) ,
(iv) A = \{x : x \text{ is a natural number and } 1 < x \leq 6\}, B = \{x : x \text{ is a natural number and } 6 < x < 10\}
(v) , Show solution
(i)
(ii)
(iii) , .
More precisely: .
(iv) , .
(v) (union with empty set gives the set itself).
2Let , . Is ? What is ?Show solution
Is ? Every element of A (i.e., and ) is also in B. Therefore, . Yes.
: Since , every element of A is already in B.
3If A and B are two sets such that , then what is ?Show solution
Concept: is the set of all elements in A or B (or both).
Since every element of A is already in B, combining A and B gives no new elements beyond B.
4If , , and ; find
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
(vii) Show solution
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
(vii)
5Find the intersection of each pair of sets of question 1 above.
(i) ,
(ii) ,
(iii) ,
(iv) A = \{x : x \text{ is a natural number and } 1 < x \leq 6\}, B = \{x : x \text{ is a natural number and } 6 < x < 10\}
(v) , Show solution
(i) Common elements of and : 1 and 3.
(ii) Common elements of and : only .
(iii) , . Common element: 3.
(iv) , . No common elements.
(v) (intersection with empty set is always empty).
6If , , and ; find
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
(vii)
(viii)
(ix)
(x) Show solution
(i) : Common elements of A and B: 7, 9, 11.
(ii) : Common elements of B and C: 11, 13.
(iii) : ; (11 ∉ D).
(iv) : Common elements: 11.
(v) : B = {7,9,11,13}, D = {15,17}. No common elements.
(vi) : First, . Then .
(vii) : A = {3,5,7,9,11}, D = {15,17}. No common elements.
(viii) : . .
(ix) : ; . Intersection: .
(x) : ; . Common elements: 7, 9, 11, 15.
7If , , , and , find
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi) Show solution
(i) : Every even natural number is a natural number, so .
(ii) : Every odd natural number is a natural number, so .
(iii) : Every prime number is a natural number, so .
(iv) : A number cannot be both even and odd simultaneously.
(v) : Even prime numbers. The only even prime is 2.
(vi) : Odd prime numbers. All primes except 2 are odd.
8Which of the following pairs of sets are disjoint?
(i) and
(ii) and
(iii) and Show solution
(i) Second set . The element 4 is in both and . So their intersection . Not disjoint.
(ii) The element is in both and . Intersection . Not disjoint.
(iii) An integer cannot be both even and odd. So the intersection of even integers and odd integers is . Disjoint.
9If , , , ; find
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
(vii)
(viii)
(ix)
(x)
(xi)
(xii) Show solution
Given: , , , .
(i) : Elements in A not in B. 12 ∈ B, so remove it.
(ii) : Elements in A not in C. 6 ∈ C, 12 ∈ C, so remove them.
(iii) : Elements in A not in D. 15 ∈ D, so remove it.
(iv) : Elements in B not in A. 12 ∈ A, so remove it.
(v) : Elements in C not in A. 6 ∈ A, 12 ∈ A, so remove them.
(vi) : Elements in D not in A. 15 ∈ A, so remove it.
(vii) : Elements in B not in C. 4 ∈ C, 8 ∈ C, 12 ∈ C, 16 ∈ C; only 20 ∉ C.
(viii) : Elements in B not in D. 20 ∈ D, so remove it.
(ix) : Elements in C not in B. 4 ∈ B, 8 ∈ B, 12 ∈ B, 16 ∈ B; remove these.
(x) : Elements in D not in B. 20 ∈ B, so remove it.
(xi) : Elements in C not in D. 10 ∈ D, so remove it.
(xii) : Elements in D not in C. 10 ∈ C, so remove it.
10If and , find
(i)
(ii)
(iii) Show solution
(i) : Elements in X not in Y. and , so remove them.
(ii) : Elements in Y not in X. and , so remove them.
(iii) : Common elements of X and Y: and .
11If is the set of real numbers and is the set of rational numbers, then what is ?Show solution
Concept:
The real numbers that are not rational are called irrational numbers.
For example, .
12State whether each of the following statement is true or false. Justify your answer.
(i) and are disjoint sets.
(ii) and are disjoint sets.
(iii) and are disjoint sets.
(iv) and are disjoint sets.Show solution
(i) . The element 3 is common. False — they are not disjoint.
(ii) . The element is common. False — they are not disjoint.
(iii) . No element is common to both sets. True — they are disjoint.
(iv) . No element is common. True — they are disjoint.
Exercise 1.5
1Let , , and . Find
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi) Show solution
Given: , , , .
(i)
(ii)
(iii) .
(iv) .
(v) (Law of double complementation)
(vi) : Elements in B not in C. , . Elements 4 and 6 are in C, so .
2If , find the complements of the following sets:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) Show solution
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
3Taking the set of natural numbers as the universal set, write down the complements of the following sets:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
(vii)
(viii)
(ix)
(x)
(xi) \{x : x \in \mathbb{N} \text{ and } 2x + 1 > 10\}Show solution
(i) Complement of even natural numbers = odd natural numbers.
(ii) Complement of odd natural numbers = even natural numbers.
(iii) Complement of multiples of 3 = natural numbers that are not multiples of 3.
(iv) Complement of prime numbers = natural numbers that are not prime (i.e., 1 and composite numbers).
(v) Natural numbers divisible by both 3 and 5 are divisible by 15: . Complement:
(vi) Complement of perfect squares:
(vii) Complement of perfect cubes:
(viii) . So the set is . Complement:
(ix) . So the set is . Complement:
(x) Complement of in :
\{x : x \in \mathbf{N} \text{ and } x < 7\} = \{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6\}
(xi) 2x + 1 > 10 \Rightarrow x > 4.5, so in . The set is . Complement:
Wait — 2(5)+1 = 11 > 10, so 5 is in the original set. The complement is ? Let me recheck: means for natural numbers.
4If , and . Verify that
(i)
(ii) Show solution
First, find complements:
, .
(i) Verify :
LHS: .
.
RHS: .
LHS = RHS = . Verified. ✓
(ii) Verify :
LHS: .
.
RHS: .
LHS = RHS = . Verified. ✓
5Draw appropriate Venn diagram for each of the following:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) Show solution
(i) : This is the complement of . In the Venn diagram, shade the region outside both circles A and B (i.e., the part of the rectangle U that is not covered by either circle). By De Morgan's law, .
(ii) : This is the set of elements not in A and not in B. Shade the region outside both A and B — same as . The shaded region is identical to (i).
(iii) : This is the complement of . Shade everything except the intersection of A and B — i.e., shade the part of A not in B, the part of B not in A, and the region outside both. By De Morgan's law, .
(iv) : Elements not in A, or not in B (or both). This equals . Shade everything except the common (intersection) region of A and B — same as (iii).
6Let be the set of all triangles in a plane. If is the set of all triangles with at least one angle different from , what is ?Show solution
Concept: = set of triangles in U that are NOT in A.
A triangle is NOT in A means it does NOT have at least one angle different from , i.e., all its angles are equal to .
A triangle with all angles equal to is an equilateral triangle.
is the set of all equilateral triangles in the plane.
7Fill in the blanks to make each of the following a true statement:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) Show solution
(i) (Complement law: a set and its complement together form the universal set)
(ii) (complement of empty set is the universal set). So .
(iii) (Complement law: a set and its complement have no common elements)
(iv) (complement of universal set is the empty set). So .
Miscellaneous Exercise on Chapter 1
1Decide, among the following sets, which sets are subsets of one and another:
, , , .Show solution
Solve :
So .
Step 2: List all sets.
, , (all positive even integers), .
Step 3: Check subset relations.
- : . ✓ So .
- : . ✓ So .
- : . ✓ So .
- : Both 2 and 6 are in B. ✓ So .
- : Both 2 and 6 are even, so in C. ✓ So .
- : 2, 4, 6 are all even. ✓ So .
- : but .
- : but .
Conclusion:
In summary: , , , , , .
2In each of the following, determine whether the statement is true or false. If it is true, prove it. If it is false, give an example.
(i) If and , then .
(ii) If and , then .
(iii) If and , then .
(iv) If and , then .
(v) If and , then .
(vi) If and , then .Show solution
Counterexample: Let , . Then and , but (the elements of B are and 3, not 1).
(ii) False.
Counterexample: Let , , . Then and , but (elements of C are and 3).
(iii) True.
Proof: Let . Since , we have . Since , we have . Since , we conclude .
(iv) False.
Counterexample: Let , , . Then (since but ) and ? Wait — . Let me choose: , , . Then (), (), but ? , . Yes, . So the statement is False.
(v) False.
Counterexample: Let , . Then and (since ), but . However, consider : , , but . The statement says , which is not always true. Counterexample: , , yet . So the statement is False.
(vi) True.
Proof: Given and . Suppose, for contradiction, . Since , — a contradiction. Therefore .
3Let A, B, and C be the sets such that and . Show that .Show solution
To prove: .
Proof:
Let . We will show .
Since , we have . Since , we get .
So either or .
Case 1: . Then since , we have . Since , we get , so .
Case 2: . Then from , we must have .
In both cases, . Therefore .
By a symmetric argument (interchanging B and C), .
Since and , we conclude .
4Show that the following four conditions are equivalent:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv) Show solution
(i) (ii): Assume . Then every element of A is in B, so there is no element in A that is not in B. Hence .
(ii) (iii): Assume , i.e., no element of A is outside B, meaning every element of A is in B, so . Now, always. Also, if , then or . If , then (since ). So in either case. Thus . Hence .
(iii) (iv): Assume . We know always. Now let . Then , so . Thus . So . Hence .
(iv) (i): Assume . Let . Then . So every element of A is in B, i.e., .
5Show that if , then .Show solution
To prove: .
Proof:
Let . Then and .
Since , every element of A is in B. Since , it follows that .
Thus and , which means .
Since , we have .
6Show that for any sets A and B,
and .Show solution
Let . Either or .
- If : then .
- If : then .
So .
Conversely, let . Then or . In either case, .
So .
Hence .
Part 2: Show .
Let . Then or .
- If : then .
- If : then , so .
So .
Conversely, let . Then or .
- If : then .
- If and : then .
- If and : then .
So .
Hence .
7Using properties of sets, show that
(i)
(ii) Show solution
We know (intersection is a subset of each set).
Therefore, (since adding a subset of A to A does not add new elements).
More formally: always. Conversely, if , then or . If , then . So in either case . Thus .
Hence . (This is the Absorption Law.)
(ii) Show :
We know .
Therefore, (since A is a subset of , the intersection is just A).
More formally: always. Conversely, if , then , so . Thus .
Hence . (This is also the Absorption Law.)
8Show that need not imply .Show solution
Let , , .
Then:
So , but .
This shows that does not necessarily imply .
9Let A and B be sets. If and for some set X, show that .Show solution
To prove: .
Proof:
Using the hint: .
*Proof of hint:* By absorption law (Q.7(ii)), . ✓
Now:
Since :
Using distributive law: .
Since :
So , which means .
Similarly:
So , which means .
Since and , we conclude .
10Find sets A, B and C such that , and are non-empty sets and .Show solution
Example:
Let , , .
Verification:
- ✓
- ✓
- ✓
- ✓
All conditions are satisfied.
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