Absolute Value

Absolute Value is the magnitude of a number without regard to its sign.

In other words to take the absolute value of a number is to measure its distance from zero. Because distance is a positive measurement of course the values will be positive but this is in regards to distance and not direction. (In this sense absolute value is to relative value as speed is to velocity.)

If we have a number line:

100+10-10---------0---------+10

The values of -10 and +10 are both 10 units from 0, although -10 is to the left and +10 is to the right.

Using a number line gives a good visual for absolute value but can be time consuming. A more practical method to calculate absolute values would be squaring the number and then taking the square root. This works because squaring a negative will result in a positive value. Thus when you try to revert back to the root of the square, you cannot. You can only determine its absolute value. Yes, simply changing the sign to positive would also work.

Find the absolute value of -11

(11)2=121(-11)^{2} = 121

121=11\sqrt{121} = 11

This is my personal method for calculating absolute value. Although I must say it is a slippery slope and is too be used wisely because it doesn't work for many absolute value problems. Although it can be helpful at times such as inputting a formula for absolute value into a graphing calculator.

#Algebra #AbsoluteValue

Note by Brody Acquilano
6 years, 5 months ago

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