Let's consider the following situation:
A scuba diver is diving at a depth of -50 feet. At the same time, a helicopter pilot is flying overhead at 30 feet above the surface. Which person is closer to sea level?
Although the scuba diver is at an altitude much lower than the helicopter, the helicopter pilot is closer to sea level.
When making this comparison, we are considering the absolute value of each measurement. The absolute value of a number is the distance from the number to zero on the number line.
The applet below shows the absolute value, or distance from zero for different integers on the number line. Move the point left and right and consider the following questions:
What do you notice about the absolute value of a positive number?
What do you notice about the absolute value of a negative number?
Can the absolute value of a number ever be a negative number? Why or why not?
We can see that the absolute value of a positive number is the number itself. However, the absolute value of a negative number is its opposite. This is because the distance is always a positive number. This applies to all numbers on the number line.
The mathematical symbol for absolute value is |\,|. For example, we would read \left|-6\right| as "the absolute value of negative six."
The absolute value of a number is its distance from zero on the number line.
The numbers -3 and 3 are both 3 units from 0, so they have the same absolute value.
The absolute value of a positive number is the number itself.
The absolute value of a negative number is its opposite.
For example, |3|=3 and |-3|=3.
What is the value of \left|-155\right|?
Which of the following are smaller than \left|-20\right|?
Evaluate each of these numbers, and order the results from smallest to largest:
\left| 19 \right|,\,\left| 0 \right|,\, \left| 41 \right|,\, \left| -31 \right|
The absolute value of a number is its distance from zero on the number line.
The absolute value of a positive number is the number itself.
The absolute value of a negative number is its opposite.