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This discusses the absolute value analytically, ie how to manipulate absolute values algebraically.
The Video!
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The most common algebraic description of absolute value that people know, tends to be that it is the thing
that “makes the value positive.” Although this is not incorrect, it is a bit imprecise. In this section we discuss
how absolute values make something positive, and how one should go about algebraically manipulating absolute
values.
Firstly, there is no magic wand in mathematics that simply makes anything positive (or, perhaps we should say,
absolute value is the magic wand... so if we want to dive into the mechanics, we need a different tool!) However, that
doesn’t mean that we don’t have a mechanism at our disposal to make negative things positive. Consider, by way of
a demonstration, . Since we are working in the real numbers (This is actually really important. If we were
working in the complex numbers, absolute value behaves very differently. So much so, in fact, that trying to use
absolute value on a complex number will certainly go horribly astray without a much better grounding in complex
numbers. For this reason, we even give it a different name, to distinguish how different it really is; we call it the
modulus.) we know that is going to be positive, negative, or zero. If is positive or zero, the absolute value will do
nothing; after all the absolute value of a positive number is just that number, and the absolute value of zero is
zero.
If, on the other hand, is a negative number, then the absolute value must change it to make it into a positive number. So, the
natural question to ask is, how do we make a negative number into a positive number? The answer: we multiply it by negative one!
Using this, we can write the following piecewise definition of .
At first glance it may seem rather counterintuitive that the absolute value appears to be placing a negative sign in front of .
After all, absolute value is suppose to only have positive output. But the key observation is that the negative sign is only being
placed in front of when is already a negative number. So even though looks like it will be negative, it will actually always give a
positive value because we’ve restricted it to values of that are already negative, so we’re taking a negative of a negative, which is
positive!
Another important observation is that the negative is being added in by the absolute value, not by the . This means that, if we
have a more complicated expression, we can end up with a more complicated looking piecewise function. Consider, for example, .
We write this in the piecewise form by doing the same thing, except now, it’s not whether or not is negative that the absolute
value cares about, it’s whether or not is negative that the absolute value cares about. So we get an initial piecewise function like
the following:
Notice that the content of the absolute value is what appears both in front of the negative and in the domain description. We
should simplify this by solving the inequalities for and simplifying the associated functions, which would mean we would rewrite
the piecewise function into the following: