Calculus, 10th Edition (Anton)

Published by Wiley
ISBN 10: 0-47064-772-8
ISBN 13: 978-0-47064-772-1

Chapter 0 - Before Calculus - Chapter 0 Review Exercises - Page 48: 26

Answer

The necessary and sufficient condition to guarantee invertibility is $ad-bc \neq 0$.

Work Step by Step

The function $f$ is invertible if and only if it is one-to-one, by Theorem 0.4.3. Assume $x_1, x_2$, are real numbers such that $f(x_1) = f(x_2)$. Writing this in terms of $a,b,c,d$ yields $$\frac{ax_1+b}{cx_1+d} = \frac{ax_2+b}{cx_2+d}.$$ Cross multiplying, one obtains $$(ax_1+b)(cx_2+d) = (ax_2+b)(cx_1+d).$$ Expanding both sides yields $$acx_1x_2 + adx_1 + bcx_2 + bd = acx_2x_1 + adx_2 + bcx_1 + bd.$$ Cancelling common terms from both sides and rearranging leaves us with $$(ad - bc)(x_1 - x_2) = 0. \tag{$\star$}$$ Therefore, $f(x_1) = f(x_2)$ is equivalent to $(\star)$. The condition that $f$ is invertible therefore is $$(ad - bc)(x_1 - x_2) = 0 \implies x_1 = x_2,$$ which is equivalent to having $ad-bc \neq 0$.
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