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In mathematics, the absolute value or modulus of a real number , denoted , is the non-negative value of without regard to its sign. Namely, if is a positive number, and if is negative (in which case negating makes positive), and . For example, the absolute value of 3 is 3, and the absolute value of −3 is also 3. The absolute value of a number may be thought of as its distance from zero.
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Generalisations of the absolute value for real numbers occur in a wide variety of mathematical settings. For example, an absolute value is also defined for the complex numbers, the quaternions, ordered rings, fields and vector spaces. The absolute value is closely related to the notions of magnitude, distance, and norm in various mathematical and physical contexts.
Terminology and notation
In 1806, Jean-Robert Argand introduced the term module, meaning unit of measure in French, specifically for the complex absolute value, and it was borrowed into English in 1866 as the Latin equivalent modulus. The term absolute value has been used in this sense from at least 1806 in French and 1857 in English. The notation |x|, with a vertical bar on each side, was introduced by Karl Weierstrass in 1841. Other names for absolute value include numerical value and magnitude. In programming languages and computational software packages, the absolute value of is generally represented by
abs(x)
, or a similar expression.
The vertical bar notation also appears in a number of other mathematical contexts: for example, when applied to a set, it denotes its cardinality; when applied to a matrix, it denotes its determinant. Vertical bars denote the absolute value only for algebraic objects for which the notion of an absolute value is defined, notably an element of a normed division algebra, for example a real number, a complex number, or a quaternion. A closely related but distinct notation is the use of vertical bars for either the Euclidean norm or sup norm of a vector in , although double vertical bars with subscripts (
and
, respectively) are a more common and less ambiguous notation.
Definition and properties
Real numbers
For any real number , the absolute value or modulus of
is denoted by
, with a vertical bar on each side of the quantity, and is defined as
The absolute value of is thus always either a positive number or zero, but never negative. When
itself is negative (
), then its absolute value is necessarily positive (
).
From an analytic geometry point of view, the absolute value of a real number is that number's distance from zero along the real number line, and more generally the absolute value of the difference of two real numbers (their absolute difference) is the distance between them. The notion of an abstract distance function in mathematics can be seen to be a generalisation of the absolute value of the difference (see "Distance" below).
Since the square root symbol represents the unique positive square root, when applied to a positive number, it follows that This is equivalent to the definition above, and may be used as an alternative definition of the absolute value of real numbers.
The absolute value has the following four fundamental properties (,
are real numbers), that are used for generalization of this notion to other domains:
Non-negativity | |
Positive-definiteness | |
Multiplicativity | |
Subadditivity, specifically the triangle inequality |
Non-negativity, positive definiteness, and multiplicativity are readily apparent from the definition. To see that subadditivity holds, first note that where
, with its sign chosen to make the result positive. Now, since
and
, it follows that, whichever of
is the value of
, one has
for all real
. Consequently,
, as desired.
Some additional useful properties are given below. These are either immediate consequences of the definition or implied by the four fundamental properties above.
Idempotence (the absolute value of the absolute value is the absolute value) | |
Evenness (reflection symmetry of the graph) | |
Identity of indiscernibles (equivalent to positive-definiteness) | |
Triangle inequality (equivalent to subadditivity) | |
Preservation of division (equivalent to multiplicativity) | |
Reverse triangle inequality (equivalent to subadditivity) |
Two other useful properties concerning inequalities are:
These relations may be used to solve inequalities involving absolute values. For example:
The absolute value, as "distance from zero", is used to define the absolute difference between arbitrary real numbers, the standard metric on the real numbers.
Complex numbers
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Since the complex numbers are not ordered, the definition given at the top for the real absolute value cannot be directly applied to complex numbers. However, the geometric interpretation of the absolute value of a real number as its distance from 0 can be generalised. The absolute value of a complex number is defined by the Euclidean distance of its corresponding point in the complex plane from the origin. This can be computed using the Pythagorean theorem: for any complex number where
and
are real numbers, the absolute value or modulus of
is denoted
and is defined by
the Pythagorean addition of
and
, where
and
denote the real and imaginary parts of
, respectively. When the imaginary part
is zero, this coincides with the definition of the absolute value of the real number
.
When a complex number is expressed in its polar form as
its absolute value is
Since the product of any complex number and its complex conjugate
, with the same absolute value, is always the non-negative real number
, the absolute value of a complex number
is the square root of
which is therefore called the absolute square or squared modulus of
:
This generalizes the alternative definition for reals:
.
The complex absolute value shares the four fundamental properties given above for the real absolute value. The identity is a special case of multiplicativity that is often useful by itself.
Absolute value function
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The real absolute value function is continuous everywhere. It is differentiable everywhere except for x = 0. It is monotonically decreasing on the interval (−∞, 0] and monotonically increasing on the interval [0, +∞). Since a real number and its opposite have the same absolute value, it is an even function, and is hence not invertible. The real absolute value function is a piecewise linear, convex function.
For both real and complex numbers the absolute value function is idempotent (meaning that the absolute value of any absolute value is itself).
Relationship to the sign function
The absolute value function of a real number returns its value irrespective of its sign, whereas the sign (or signum) function returns a number's sign irrespective of its value. The following equations show the relationship between these two functions:
or
and for x ≠ 0,
Relationship to the max and min functions
Let , then the following relationship to the minimum and maximum functions hold:
and
The formulas can be derived by considering each case and
separately.
Derivative
The real absolute value function has a derivative for every x ≠ 0, but is not differentiable at x = 0. Its derivative for x ≠ 0 is given by the step function:
The real absolute value function is an example of a continuous function that achieves a global minimum where the derivative does not exist.
The subdifferential of |x| at x = 0 is the interval [−1, 1].
The complex absolute value function is continuous everywhere but complex differentiable nowhere because it violates the Cauchy–Riemann equations.
The second derivative of |x| with respect to x is zero everywhere except zero, where it does not exist. As a generalised function, the second derivative may be taken as two times the Dirac delta function.
Antiderivative
The antiderivative (indefinite integral) of the real absolute value function is
where C is an arbitrary constant of integration. This is not a complex antiderivative because complex antiderivatives can only exist for complex-differentiable (holomorphic) functions, which the complex absolute value function is not.
Derivatives of compositions
The following two formulae are special cases of the chain rule:
if the absolute value is inside a function, and
if another function is inside the absolute value. In the first case, the derivative is always discontinuous at in the first case and where
in the second case.
Distance
The absolute value is closely related to the idea of distance. As noted above, the absolute value of a real or complex number is the distance from that number to the origin, along the real number line, for real numbers, or in the complex plane, for complex numbers, and more generally, the absolute value of the difference of two real or complex numbers is the distance between them.
The standard Euclidean distance between two points
and
in Euclidean n-space is defined as:
This can be seen as a generalisation, since for and
real, i.e. in a 1-space, according to the alternative definition of the absolute value,
and for and
complex numbers, i.e. in a 2-space,
The above shows that the "absolute value"-distance, for real and complex numbers, agrees with the standard Euclidean distance, which they inherit as a result of considering them as one and two-dimensional Euclidean spaces, respectively.
The properties of the absolute value of the difference of two real or complex numbers: non-negativity, identity of indiscernibles, symmetry and the triangle inequality given above, can be seen to motivate the more general notion of a distance function as follows:
A real valued function d on a set X × X is called a metric (or a distance function) on X, if it satisfies the following four axioms:
Non-negativity Identity of indiscernibles Symmetry Triangle inequality
Generalizations
Ordered rings
The definition of absolute value given for real numbers above can be extended to any ordered ring. That is, if a is an element of an ordered ring R, then the absolute value of a, denoted by |a|, is defined to be:
where −a is the additive inverse of a, 0 is the additive identity, and < and ≥ have the usual meaning with respect to the ordering in the ring.
Fields
The four fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers can be used to generalise the notion of absolute value to an arbitrary field, as follows.
A real-valued function v on a field F is called an absolute value (also a modulus, magnitude, value, or valuation) if it satisfies the following four axioms:
Non-negativity Positive-definiteness Multiplicativity Subadditivity or the triangle inequality
Where 0 denotes the additive identity of F. It follows from positive-definiteness and multiplicativity that v(1) = 1, where 1 denotes the multiplicative identity of F. The real and complex absolute values defined above are examples of absolute values for an arbitrary field.
If v is an absolute value on F, then the function d on F × F, defined by d(a, b) = v(a − b), is a metric and the following are equivalent:
- d satisfies the ultrametric inequality
for all x, y, z in F.
is bounded in R.
for every
.
for all
.
for all
.
An absolute value which satisfies any (hence all) of the above conditions is said to be non-Archimedean, otherwise it is said to be Archimedean.
Vector spaces
Again the fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers can be used, with a slight modification, to generalise the notion to an arbitrary vector space.
A real-valued function on a vector space V over a field F, represented as ‖ · ‖, is called an absolute value, but more usually a norm, if it satisfies the following axioms:
For all a in F, and v, u in V,
Non-negativity Positive-definiteness Absolute homogeneity or positive scalability Subadditivity or the triangle inequality
The norm of a vector is also called its length or magnitude.
In the case of Euclidean space , the function defined by
is a norm called the Euclidean norm. When the real numbers are considered as the one-dimensional vector space
, the absolute value is a norm, and is the p-norm (see Lp space) for any p. In fact the absolute value is the "only" norm on
, in the sense that, for every norm ‖ · ‖ on
, ‖x‖ = ‖1‖ ⋅ |x|.
The complex absolute value is a special case of the norm in an inner product space, which is identical to the Euclidean norm when the complex plane is identified as the Euclidean plane .
Composition algebras
Every composition algebra A has an involution x → x* called its conjugation. The product in A of an element x and its conjugate x* is written N(x) = x x* and called the norm of x.
The real numbers , complex numbers
, and quaternions
are all composition algebras with norms given by definite quadratic forms. The absolute value in these division algebras is given by the square root of the composition algebra norm.
In general the norm of a composition algebra may be a quadratic form that is not definite and has null vectors. However, as in the case of division algebras, when an element x has a non-zero norm, then x has a multiplicative inverse given by x*/N(x).
See also
- Least absolute values
Notes
- Oxford English Dictionary, Draft Revision, June 2008
- Nahin, O'Connor and Robertson, and functions.Wolfram.com.; for the French sense, see Littré, 1877
- Lazare Nicolas M. Carnot, Mémoire sur la relation qui existe entre les distances respectives de cinq point quelconques pris dans l'espace, p. 105 at Google Books
- James Mill Peirce, A Text-book of Analytic Geometry at Internet Archive. The oldest citation in the 2nd edition of the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1907. The term absolute value is also used in contrast to relative value.
- Nicholas J. Higham, Handbook of writing for the mathematical sciences, SIAM. ISBN 0-89871-420-6, p. 25
- Spivak, Michael (1965). Calculus on Manifolds. Boulder, CO: Westview. p. 1. ISBN 0805390219.
- Munkres, James (1991). Analysis on Manifolds. Boulder, CO: Westview. p. 4. ISBN 0201510359.
- Mendelson, p. 2.
- Smith, Karl (2013). Precalculus: A Functional Approach to Graphing and Problem Solving. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-7637-5177-7.
- Stewart, James B. (2001). Calculus: concepts and contexts. Australia: Brooks/Cole. p. A5. ISBN 0-534-37718-1.
- González, Mario O. (1992). Classical Complex Analysis. CRC Press. p. 19. ISBN 9780824784157.
- "Weisstein, Eric W. Absolute Value. From MathWorld – A Wolfram Web Resource".
- Bartle and Sherbert, p. 163
- Peter Wriggers, Panagiotis Panatiotopoulos, eds., New Developments in Contact Problems, 1999, ISBN 3-211-83154-1, p. 31–32
- These axioms are not minimal; for instance, non-negativity can be derived from the other three: 0 = d(a, a) ≤ d(a, b) + d(b, a) = 2d(a, b).
- Mac Lane, p. 264.
- Shechter, p. 260. This meaning of valuation is rare. Usually, a valuation is the logarithm of the inverse of an absolute value
- Shechter, pp. 260–261.
References
- Bartle; Sherbert; Introduction to real analysis (4th ed.), John Wiley & Sons, 2011 ISBN 978-0-471-43331-6.
- Nahin, Paul J.; An Imaginary Tale; Princeton University Press; (hardcover, 1998). ISBN 0-691-02795-1.
- Mac Lane, Saunders, Garrett Birkhoff, Algebra, American Mathematical Soc., 1999. ISBN 978-0-8218-1646-2.
- Mendelson, Elliott, Schaum's Outline of Beginning Calculus, McGraw-Hill Professional, 2008. ISBN 978-0-07-148754-2.
- O'Connor, J.J. and Robertson, E.F.; "Jean Robert Argand".
- Schechter, Eric; Handbook of Analysis and Its Foundations, pp. 259–263, "Absolute Values", Academic Press (1997) ISBN 0-12-622760-8.
External links
- "Absolute value". Encyclopedia of Mathematics. EMS Press. 2001 [1994].
- absolute value at PlanetMath.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Absolute Value". MathWorld.
In mathematics the absolute value or modulus of a real number x displaystyle x denoted x displaystyle x is the non negative value of x displaystyle x without regard to its sign Namely x x displaystyle x x if x displaystyle x is a positive number and x x displaystyle x x if x displaystyle x is negative in which case negating x displaystyle x makes x displaystyle x positive and 0 0 displaystyle 0 0 For example the absolute value of 3 is 3 and the absolute value of 3 is also 3 The absolute value of a number may be thought of as its distance from zero The graph of the absolute value function for real numbersThe absolute value of a number may be thought of as its distance from zero Generalisations of the absolute value for real numbers occur in a wide variety of mathematical settings For example an absolute value is also defined for the complex numbers the quaternions ordered rings fields and vector spaces The absolute value is closely related to the notions of magnitude distance and norm in various mathematical and physical contexts Terminology and notationIn 1806 Jean Robert Argand introduced the term module meaning unit of measure in French specifically for the complex absolute value and it was borrowed into English in 1866 as the Latin equivalent modulus The term absolute value has been used in this sense from at least 1806 in French and 1857 in English The notation x with a vertical bar on each side was introduced by Karl Weierstrass in 1841 Other names for absolute value include numerical value and magnitude In programming languages and computational software packages the absolute value of x textstyle x is generally represented by abs i x i or a similar expression The vertical bar notation also appears in a number of other mathematical contexts for example when applied to a set it denotes its cardinality when applied to a matrix it denotes its determinant Vertical bars denote the absolute value only for algebraic objects for which the notion of an absolute value is defined notably an element of a normed division algebra for example a real number a complex number or a quaternion A closely related but distinct notation is the use of vertical bars for either the Euclidean norm or sup norm of a vector in Rn displaystyle mathbb R n although double vertical bars with subscripts 2 displaystyle cdot 2 and displaystyle cdot infty respectively are a more common and less ambiguous notation Definition and propertiesReal numbers For any real number x displaystyle x the absolute value or modulus of x displaystyle x is denoted by x displaystyle x with a vertical bar on each side of the quantity and is defined as x x if x 0 x if x lt 0 displaystyle x begin cases x amp text if x geq 0 x amp text if x lt 0 end cases The absolute value of x displaystyle x is thus always either a positive number or zero but never negative When x displaystyle x itself is negative x lt 0 displaystyle x lt 0 then its absolute value is necessarily positive x x gt 0 displaystyle x x gt 0 From an analytic geometry point of view the absolute value of a real number is that number s distance from zero along the real number line and more generally the absolute value of the difference of two real numbers their absolute difference is the distance between them The notion of an abstract distance function in mathematics can be seen to be a generalisation of the absolute value of the difference see Distance below Since the square root symbol represents the unique positive square root when applied to a positive number it follows that This is equivalent to the definition above and may be used as an alternative definition of the absolute value of real numbers The absolute value has the following four fundamental properties a textstyle a b textstyle b are real numbers that are used for generalization of this notion to other domains Non negativity a 0 a 0 displaystyle a 0 iff a 0 Positive definiteness ab a b displaystyle ab left a right left b right MultiplicativitySubadditivity specifically the triangle inequality Non negativity positive definiteness and multiplicativity are readily apparent from the definition To see that subadditivity holds first note that a b s a b displaystyle a b s a b where s 1 displaystyle s pm 1 with its sign chosen to make the result positive Now since 1 x x displaystyle 1 cdot x leq x and 1 x x displaystyle 1 cdot x leq x it follows that whichever of 1 displaystyle pm 1 is the value of s displaystyle s one has s x x displaystyle s cdot x leq x for all real x displaystyle x Consequently a b s a b s a s b a b displaystyle a b s cdot a b s cdot a s cdot b leq a b as desired Some additional useful properties are given below These are either immediate consequences of the definition or implied by the four fundamental properties above a a displaystyle bigl left a right bigr a Idempotence the absolute value of the absolute value is the absolute value a a displaystyle left a right a Evenness reflection symmetry of the graph a b 0 a b displaystyle a b 0 iff a b Identity of indiscernibles equivalent to positive definiteness a b a c c b displaystyle a b leq a c c b Triangle inequality equivalent to subadditivity ab a b displaystyle left frac a b right frac a b if b 0 displaystyle b neq 0 Preservation of division equivalent to multiplicativity a b a b displaystyle a b geq bigl left a right left b right bigr Reverse triangle inequality equivalent to subadditivity Two other useful properties concerning inequalities are a b b a b displaystyle a leq b iff b leq a leq b a b a b displaystyle a geq b iff a leq b or a b displaystyle a geq b These relations may be used to solve inequalities involving absolute values For example x 3 9 displaystyle x 3 leq 9 9 x 3 9 displaystyle iff 9 leq x 3 leq 9 6 x 12 displaystyle iff 6 leq x leq 12 The absolute value as distance from zero is used to define the absolute difference between arbitrary real numbers the standard metric on the real numbers Complex numbers The absolute value of a complex number z displaystyle z is the distance r displaystyle r of z displaystyle z from the origin It is also seen in the picture that z displaystyle z and its complex conjugate z displaystyle bar z have the same absolute value Since the complex numbers are not ordered the definition given at the top for the real absolute value cannot be directly applied to complex numbers However the geometric interpretation of the absolute value of a real number as its distance from 0 can be generalised The absolute value of a complex number is defined by the Euclidean distance of its corresponding point in the complex plane from the origin This can be computed using the Pythagorean theorem for any complex number z x iy displaystyle z x iy where x displaystyle x and y displaystyle y are real numbers the absolute value or modulus of z displaystyle z is denoted z displaystyle z and is defined by z Re z 2 Im z 2 x2 y2 displaystyle z sqrt operatorname Re z 2 operatorname Im z 2 sqrt x 2 y 2 the Pythagorean addition of x displaystyle x and y displaystyle y where Re z x displaystyle operatorname Re z x and Im z y displaystyle operatorname Im z y denote the real and imaginary parts of z displaystyle z respectively When the imaginary part y displaystyle y is zero this coincides with the definition of the absolute value of the real number x displaystyle x When a complex number z displaystyle z is expressed in its polar form as z rei8 displaystyle z re i theta its absolute value is z r displaystyle z r Since the product of any complex number z displaystyle z and its complex conjugate z x iy displaystyle bar z x iy with the same absolute value is always the non negative real number x2 y2 displaystyle left x 2 y 2 right the absolute value of a complex number z displaystyle z is the square root of z z displaystyle z cdot overline z which is therefore called the absolute square or squared modulus of z displaystyle z z z z displaystyle z sqrt z cdot overline z This generalizes the alternative definition for reals x x x textstyle x sqrt x cdot x The complex absolute value shares the four fundamental properties given above for the real absolute value The identity z 2 z2 displaystyle z 2 z 2 is a special case of multiplicativity that is often useful by itself Absolute value functionThe graph of the absolute value function for real numbersComposition of absolute value with a cubic function in different orders The real absolute value function is continuous everywhere It is differentiable everywhere except for x 0 It is monotonically decreasing on the interval 0 and monotonically increasing on the interval 0 Since a real number and its opposite have the same absolute value it is an even function and is hence not invertible The real absolute value function is a piecewise linear convex function For both real and complex numbers the absolute value function is idempotent meaning that the absolute value of any absolute value is itself Relationship to the sign function The absolute value function of a real number returns its value irrespective of its sign whereas the sign or signum function returns a number s sign irrespective of its value The following equations show the relationship between these two functions x xsgn x displaystyle x x operatorname sgn x or x sgn x x displaystyle x operatorname sgn x x and for x 0 sgn x x x x x displaystyle operatorname sgn x frac x x frac x x Relationship to the max and min functions Let s t R displaystyle s t in mathbb R then the following relationship to the minimum and maximum functions hold t s 2min s t s t displaystyle t s 2 min s t s t and t s 2max s t s t displaystyle t s 2 max s t s t The formulas can be derived by considering each case s gt t displaystyle s gt t and t gt s displaystyle t gt s separately Derivative The real absolute value function has a derivative for every x 0 but is not differentiable at x 0 Its derivative for x 0 is given by the step function d x dx x x 1x lt 01x gt 0 displaystyle frac d left x right dx frac x x begin cases 1 amp x lt 0 1 amp x gt 0 end cases The real absolute value function is an example of a continuous function that achieves a global minimum where the derivative does not exist The subdifferential of x at x 0 is the interval 1 1 The complex absolute value function is continuous everywhere but complex differentiable nowhere because it violates the Cauchy Riemann equations The second derivative of x with respect to x is zero everywhere except zero where it does not exist As a generalised function the second derivative may be taken as two times the Dirac delta function Antiderivative The antiderivative indefinite integral of the real absolute value function is x dx x x 2 C displaystyle int left x right dx frac x left x right 2 C where C is an arbitrary constant of integration This is not a complex antiderivative because complex antiderivatives can only exist for complex differentiable holomorphic functions which the complex absolute value function is not Derivatives of compositions The following two formulae are special cases of the chain rule ddxf x x x f x displaystyle d over dx f x x over x f x if the absolute value is inside a function and ddx f x f x f x f x displaystyle d over dx f x f x over f x f x if another function is inside the absolute value In the first case the derivative is always discontinuous at x 0 textstyle x 0 in the first case and where f x 0 textstyle f x 0 in the second case DistanceThe absolute value is closely related to the idea of distance As noted above the absolute value of a real or complex number is the distance from that number to the origin along the real number line for real numbers or in the complex plane for complex numbers and more generally the absolute value of the difference of two real or complex numbers is the distance between them The standard Euclidean distance between two points a a1 a2 an displaystyle a a 1 a 2 dots a n and b b1 b2 bn displaystyle b b 1 b 2 dots b n in Euclidean n space is defined as i 1n ai bi 2 displaystyle sqrt textstyle sum i 1 n a i b i 2 This can be seen as a generalisation since for a1 displaystyle a 1 and b1 displaystyle b 1 real i e in a 1 space according to the alternative definition of the absolute value a1 b1 a1 b1 2 i 11 ai bi 2 displaystyle a 1 b 1 sqrt a 1 b 1 2 sqrt textstyle sum i 1 1 a i b i 2 and for a a1 ia2 displaystyle a a 1 ia 2 and b b1 ib2 displaystyle b b 1 ib 2 complex numbers i e in a 2 space a b displaystyle a b a1 ia2 b1 ib2 displaystyle a 1 ia 2 b 1 ib 2 a1 b1 i a2 b2 displaystyle a 1 b 1 i a 2 b 2 a1 b1 2 a2 b2 2 i 12 ai bi 2 displaystyle sqrt a 1 b 1 2 a 2 b 2 2 sqrt textstyle sum i 1 2 a i b i 2 The above shows that the absolute value distance for real and complex numbers agrees with the standard Euclidean distance which they inherit as a result of considering them as one and two dimensional Euclidean spaces respectively The properties of the absolute value of the difference of two real or complex numbers non negativity identity of indiscernibles symmetry and the triangle inequality given above can be seen to motivate the more general notion of a distance function as follows A real valued function d on a set X X is called a metric or a distance function on X if it satisfies the following four axioms d a b 0 displaystyle d a b geq 0 Non negativityd a b 0 a b displaystyle d a b 0 iff a b Identity of indiscerniblesd a b d b a displaystyle d a b d b a Symmetryd a b d a c d c b displaystyle d a b leq d a c d c b Triangle inequalityGeneralizationsOrdered rings The definition of absolute value given for real numbers above can be extended to any ordered ring That is if a is an element of an ordered ring R then the absolute value of a denoted by a is defined to be a a if a 0 a if a lt 0 displaystyle a left begin array rl a amp text if a geq 0 a amp text if a lt 0 end array right where a is the additive inverse of a 0 is the additive identity and lt and have the usual meaning with respect to the ordering in the ring Fields The four fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers can be used to generalise the notion of absolute value to an arbitrary field as follows A real valued function v on a field F is called an absolute value also a modulus magnitude value or valuation if it satisfies the following four axioms v a 0 displaystyle v a geq 0 Non negativityv a 0 a 0 displaystyle v a 0 iff a mathbf 0 Positive definitenessv ab v a v b displaystyle v ab v a v b Multiplicativityv a b v a v b displaystyle v a b leq v a v b Subadditivity or the triangle inequality Where 0 denotes the additive identity of F It follows from positive definiteness and multiplicativity that v 1 1 where 1 denotes the multiplicative identity of F The real and complex absolute values defined above are examples of absolute values for an arbitrary field If v is an absolute value on F then the function d on F F defined by d a b v a b is a metric and the following are equivalent d satisfies the ultrametric inequality d x y max d x z d y z displaystyle d x y leq max d x z d y z for all x y z in F v k 1n1 n N textstyle left v left sum k 1 n mathbf 1 right n in mathbb N right is bounded in R v k 1n1 1 displaystyle v left textstyle sum k 1 n mathbf 1 right leq 1 for every n N displaystyle n in mathbb N v a 1 v 1 a 1 displaystyle v a leq 1 Rightarrow v 1 a leq 1 for all a F displaystyle a in F v a b max v a v b displaystyle v a b leq max v a v b for all a b F displaystyle a b in F An absolute value which satisfies any hence all of the above conditions is said to be non Archimedean otherwise it is said to be Archimedean Vector spaces Again the fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers can be used with a slight modification to generalise the notion to an arbitrary vector space A real valued function on a vector space V over a field F represented as is called an absolute value but more usually a norm if it satisfies the following axioms For all a in F and v u in V v 0 displaystyle mathbf v geq 0 Non negativity v 0 v 0 displaystyle mathbf v 0 iff mathbf v 0 Positive definiteness av a v displaystyle a mathbf v left a right left mathbf v right Absolute homogeneity or positive scalability v u v u displaystyle mathbf v mathbf u leq mathbf v mathbf u Subadditivity or the triangle inequality The norm of a vector is also called its length or magnitude In the case of Euclidean space Rn displaystyle mathbb R n the function defined by x1 x2 xn i 1nxi2 displaystyle x 1 x 2 dots x n sqrt textstyle sum i 1 n x i 2 is a norm called the Euclidean norm When the real numbers R displaystyle mathbb R are considered as the one dimensional vector space R1 displaystyle mathbb R 1 the absolute value is a norm and is the p norm see Lp space for any p In fact the absolute value is the only norm on R1 displaystyle mathbb R 1 in the sense that for every norm on R1 displaystyle mathbb R 1 x 1 x The complex absolute value is a special case of the norm in an inner product space which is identical to the Euclidean norm when the complex plane is identified as the Euclidean plane R2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 Composition algebras Every composition algebra A has an involution x x called its conjugation The product in A of an element x and its conjugate x is written N x x x and called the norm of x The real numbers R displaystyle mathbb R complex numbers C displaystyle mathbb C and quaternions H displaystyle mathbb H are all composition algebras with norms given by definite quadratic forms The absolute value in these division algebras is given by the square root of the composition algebra norm In general the norm of a composition algebra may be a quadratic form that is not definite and has null vectors However as in the case of division algebras when an element x has a non zero norm then x has a multiplicative inverse given by x N x See alsoLeast absolute valuesNotesOxford English Dictionary Draft Revision June 2008 Nahin O Connor and Robertson and functions Wolfram com for the French sense see Littre 1877 Lazare Nicolas M Carnot Memoire sur la relation qui existe entre les distances respectives de cinq point quelconques pris dans l espace p 105 at Google Books James Mill Peirce A Text book of Analytic Geometry at Internet Archive The oldest citation in the 2nd edition of the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1907 The term absolute value is also used in contrast to relative value Nicholas J Higham Handbook of writing for the mathematical sciences SIAM ISBN 0 89871 420 6 p 25 Spivak Michael 1965 Calculus on Manifolds Boulder CO Westview p 1 ISBN 0805390219 Munkres James 1991 Analysis on Manifolds Boulder CO Westview p 4 ISBN 0201510359 Mendelson p 2 Smith Karl 2013 Precalculus A Functional Approach to Graphing and Problem Solving Jones amp Bartlett Publishers p 8 ISBN 978 0 7637 5177 7 Stewart James B 2001 Calculus concepts and contexts Australia Brooks Cole p A5 ISBN 0 534 37718 1 Gonzalez Mario O 1992 Classical Complex Analysis CRC Press p 19 ISBN 9780824784157 Weisstein Eric W Absolute Value From MathWorld A Wolfram Web Resource Bartle and Sherbert p 163 Peter Wriggers Panagiotis Panatiotopoulos eds New Developments in Contact Problems 1999 ISBN 3 211 83154 1 p 31 32 These axioms are not minimal for instance non negativity can be derived from the other three 0 d a a d a b d b a 2d a b Mac Lane p 264 Shechter p 260 This meaning of valuation is rare Usually a valuation is the logarithm of the inverse of an absolute value Shechter pp 260 261 ReferencesBartle Sherbert Introduction to real analysis 4th ed John Wiley amp Sons 2011 ISBN 978 0 471 43331 6 Nahin Paul J An Imaginary Tale Princeton University Press hardcover 1998 ISBN 0 691 02795 1 Mac Lane Saunders Garrett Birkhoff Algebra American Mathematical Soc 1999 ISBN 978 0 8218 1646 2 Mendelson Elliott Schaum s Outline of Beginning Calculus McGraw Hill Professional 2008 ISBN 978 0 07 148754 2 O Connor J J and Robertson E F Jean Robert Argand Schechter Eric Handbook of Analysis and Its Foundations pp 259 263 Absolute Values Academic Press 1997 ISBN 0 12 622760 8 External links Absolute value Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 absolute value at PlanetMath Weisstein Eric W Absolute Value MathWorld