In
mathematics, the 'absolute value' (or 'modulus'
[1]) of a
real number is its numerical value without regard to its
sign. So, for example, 3 is the absolute value of both 3 and −3. In
computer programming, the
mathematical function used to perform this calculation is usually given the name 'abs()'.
Generalizations 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.

The graph of the absolute value function for real numbers.
Real numbers
For any
real number ''a'' the 'absolute value' or 'modulus' of ''a'' is denoted
[2] by | ''a'' | and is defined as
:
As can be seen from the above definition, the absolute value of ''a'' is always either
positive or
zero, but never
negative.
From a geometric point of view, the absolute value of a real number is the
distance along the
real number line of that number from zero, and more generally the absolute value of the difference of two real numbers is the distance between them. Indeed the notion of an abstract
distance function in mathematics can be seen to be a generalization of the absolute value of the difference (see
"Distance" below).
The following proposition, gives an
identity which is sometimes used as an alternative (and equivalent) definition of the absolute value:
'PROPOSITION 1':
:
The absolute value has the following four fundamental properties:
'PROPOSITION 2':
:
Other important properties of the absolute value include:
'PROPOSITION 3':
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Symmetry
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Identity of indiscernibles (equivalent to positive-definiteness)
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Triangle inequality (equivalent to subadditivity)
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|Preservation of division (equivalent to multiplicativeness)
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|(equivalent to subadditivity)
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Two other useful inequalities are:
:
:
The above are often used in solving inequalities; for example:
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Complex numbers
Since the
complex numbers are not
ordered, the definition given above for the real absolute value cannot be directly generalized for a complex number. However the identity given in Proposition 1:
:
can be seen as motivating the following definition.
For any complex number
:
where ''x'' and ''y'' are real numbers, the 'absolute value' or 'modulus' of
is denoted
and is defined as
:
It follows that the absolute value of a real number ''x'' is equal to its absolute value considered as a complex number since:
:
Similar to the geometric interpretation of the absolute value for real numbers, it follows from the
Pythagorean theorem that the absolute value of a complex number is the distance in the
complex plane of that complex number from the
origin, and more generally, that the absolute value of the difference of two complex numbers is equal to the distance between those two complex numbers.
The complex absolute value shares all the properties of the real absolute value given in Propositions 2 and 3 above. In addition, If
:
and
:
is the
complex conjugate of
, then it is easily seen that
:
:
:
The latter formula is the complex analogue of proposition 1 mentioned above in the real case...
Since the positive reals form a subgroup of the complex numbers under multiplication, we may think of absolute value as an
endomorphism of the
multiplicative group of the complex numbers.
Absolute value functions
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 negative have the same absolute value, it is an
even function, and is hence not
invertible.
The
complex absolute value function is continuous everywhere but (complex) differentiable ''nowhere'' (One way to see this is to show that it does not obey the
Cauchy-Riemann equations).
Both the real and complex functions are
idempotent.
It is a
nonlinear function.
Ordered rings
The definition of absolute value given for real numbers above can easily be extended to any
ordered ring. That is, if
is an element of an ordered ring
, then the 'absolute value' of
, denoted by
, is defined to be:
:
where
is the
additive inverse of
, and
is the additive
identity element.
|-76xb5s|
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 |-2x-3abdfz|
:
in
Euclidean ''n''-space is defined as:
:
This can be seen to be a generalization of
since if
are real, then by Proposition 1,
:
while if
:
and
:
are complex numbers, then
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The above shows that the "absolute value" distance for the real numbers or the complex numbers, agrees with the standard Euclidean distance they inherit as a result of considering them as the 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 in Propositions 2 and 3 above, can be seen to motivate the more general notion of a
distance function as follows:
A real valued function
on a set
is called a 'distance function' (or a 'metric') for
, if it satisfies the following four axioms:
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|Non-negativity
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|Identity of indiscernibles
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|Symmetry
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|Triangle inequality
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Derivatives
The
derivative of the real absolute value function is the
signum function, sgn(''x''), which is defined as
:
for ''x'' ≠0. The absolute value function is not differentiable at ''x'' = 0. Where the absolute value function of a real number returns a value without respect to its sign, the signum function returns a number's sign without respect to its value. Therefore ''x'' = sgn(''x'')abs(''x''). The signum function is a form of the
Heaviside step function used in signal processing, defined as:
:
Where the value of the Heaviside function at zero is conventional. So we have at all nonzero points on the
real number line,
:
The absolute value function has no concavity at any point, the sign function is constant at all points. Therefore the second derivative of |''x''| with respect to ''x'' is zero everywhere except zero, where it is undefined.
The absolute value function is also integrable. Its
antiderivative is
:
Fields
The fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers given in Proposition 2 above, can be used to generalize the notion of absolute value to an arbitrary field, as follows.
A real-valued function
on a
field is called an '
absolute value' (also a ''modulus'', ''magnitude'', ''value'', or ''valuation'') if it satisfies the following four axioms:
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|Non-negativity
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|Positive-definiteness
|-
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|Multiplicativeness
|-
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|Subadditivity or the triangle inequality
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Where
denotes the additive
identity element of
. It follows from positive-definiteness and multiplicativeness that
, where
denotes the multiplicative identity element of
. The real and complex absolute values defined above are examples of absolute values for an arbitrary field.
If
is an absolute value on
, then the function
on
, defined by
, is a metric and the following are equivalent:
★
satisfies the
ultrametric inequality
★
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.
[3]
Vector spaces
Main articles: Norm (mathematics)
Again the fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers can be used, with a slight modification, to generalize the notion to an arbitrary vector space.
A real valued function ||·|| on a
vector space over a field
, is called an 'absolute value' (or more usually a '
norm') if it satisfies the following axioms:
For all
in
, and
,
in
,
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|Non-negativity
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|Positive-definiteness
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|Positive homogeneity or positive scalability
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|Subadditivity or triangle inequality
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The norm of a vector is also called its ''length'' or ''magnitude''.
In the case of
Euclidean space 'R'
''n'', the function defined by
:
is a norm called the
Euclidean norm. When the real numbers 'R' are considered as the one-dimensional vector space
'R'1, the absolute value is a
norm, and is the
''p''-norm for any ''p''. In fact the absolute value is the "only" norm on 'R'
1, in the sense that, for every norm ||·|| on 'R'
1, ||''x''||=||1||·|''x''|. The complex absolute value is a special case of the
norm in an
inner product space. It is identical to the Euclidean norm, if the
complex plane is identified with the
Euclidean plane 'R'
2.
Algorithms
In the
C programming language, the
abs(),
labs(),
llabs() (in C99),
fabs(),
fabsf(), and
fabsl() functions compute the absolute value of an operand. Coding the integer version of the function is trivial, ignoring the boundary case where the largest negative integer is input:
int abs (int i)
{
if (i < 0)
return -i;
else
return i;
}
The
floating-point versions are trickier, as they have to contend with special codes for
infinity and
not-a-numbers.
The function for absolute value in
Fortran,
Matlab, and
GNU_Octave is
abs. It handles integer, real as well as complex numbers.
Using
assembly language, it is possible to take the absolute value of a
register in just three instructions (example shown for a 32-bit register on an
x86 architecture,
Intel syntax):
cdq
xor eax, edx
sub eax, edx
cdq extends the sign bit of
eax into
edx. If
eax is nonnegative, then
edx becomes zero, and the latter two instructions have no effect, leaving
eax unchanged. If
eax is negative, then
edx becomes 0xFFFFFFFF, or -1. The next two instructions then become a
two's complement inversion, giving the absolute value of the negative value in
eax.
Notes
1. Jean-Robert Argand, is credited with introducing the term "modulus" in 1806, see: Nahin, O'Connor and Robertson, and functions.Wolfram.com.
2. functions.Wolfram.com credits Karl Weierstrass with introducing the notation in 1841.
3. Schechter, p 260-261.
References
★ Nahin, Paul J.;
''An Imaginary Tale''; Princeton University Press; (hardcover, 1998). ISBN 0-691-02795-1
★ 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
★
★
See also
★
Absolute value (algebra)
★
Valuation (mathematics)