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Your class is in groups, working on a sets worksheet. Your classmate suggests that if the union of two non-empty sets is the empty set, then the sets must be disjoint. What would you say to explain how this statement is false, and how would you help correct them

1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

The answer is "
\bold{A \cap\ B=\phi}"

Step-by-step explanation:

let


A=\{1,2,3\}\\\\B=\{4,5,6\}

A and B are disjoint sets and they are not an empty set then:


A\cup\ B=\{1,2,3,4,5,6\} \\\\A\cup\ B\\eq 0

therefore if the intersection of the two non-empty sets is the empty set then its disjoint set, which is equal to
\bold{A \cap\ B=\phi}.

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