1. Check Reflexivity: - For \( P \) to be reflexive, \( x \, P \, x \) must hold for all \( x \).
2. Check Symmetry: - If \( x \, P \, y \), then \( x - y + \sqrt{2} \) is irrational.
3. Check Transitivity: - If \( x \, P \, y \) and \( y \, P \, z \), then \( x - y + \sqrt{2} \) and \( y - z + \sqrt{2} \) are irrational.
4. Since \( P \) is only reflexive, it is not an equivalence relation.
A school is organizing a debate competition with participants as speakers and judges. $ S = \{S_1, S_2, S_3, S_4\} $ where $ S = \{S_1, S_2, S_3, S_4\} $ represents the set of speakers. The judges are represented by the set: $ J = \{J_1, J_2, J_3\} $ where $ J = \{J_1, J_2, J_3\} $ represents the set of judges. Each speaker can be assigned only one judge. Let $ R $ be a relation from set $ S $ to $ J $ defined as: $ R = \{(x, y) : \text{speaker } x \text{ is judged by judge } y, x \in S, y \in J\} $.