Negative and non-negative numbers |
A negative number is a number that is less than zero, such as -3. A positive number is a number that is greater than zero, such as
3. Zero itself is neither negative nor positive. The non-negative numbers are the positive numbers together with
zero. Note that some numbers are neither negative nor non-negative, for example the imaginary unit i.
Negative numbers
These include negative integers, negative rational numbers, negative real numbers, negative
hyperreal numbers, and negative surreal numbers.
Negative integers can be regarded as an extension of the natural
numbers, such that the equation x − y = z has a meaningful solution for all values of
x and y. The other sets of numbers are then derived as progressively more elaborate extensions and
generalizations from the integers.
Negative numbers are useful to describe values on a scale that goes below zero, such as temperature, and also in bookkeeping where they can be used
to represent debts. In bookkeeping, debts are often represented by red numbers, or a number in parentheses.
Positive numbers
A number is positive if it is strictly greater than 0. Zero is not a positive number, though in computing zero is sometimes
treated as though it were a positive number (due to the way that numbers are typically represented).
In the context of complex numbers positive implies real, but for
clarity one may say "positive real number".
Non-negative numbers
A number is nonnegative if and only if it is greater than or equal to zero, i.e.
positive or zero. Thus the nonnegative integers are all the integers from
zero on upwards, and the nonnegative reals are all the real numbers from zero on upwards.
A real matrix A is called
nonnegative if every entry of A is nonnegative.
A real matrix A is called
totally nonnegative by matrix theorists or totally positive by
computer scientists if the determinant of every square submatrix of
A is nonnegative.
Sign function
It is possible to define a function sgn(x) on the real numbers which is 1 for positive numbers, -1 for negative
numbers and 0 for zero (sometimes called the signum function):
-
We then have (except for x=0):
-
where |x| is the absolute value of x and
H(x) is the Heaviside step function.
This can in a sense be extended to complex numbers, by writing then as
z = r eiθ, with r>0 and real, and looking at
eiθ, i.e. . Again 0 needs to be treated as a special case.
Arithmetic involving signed numbers
Addition and subtraction
For purposes of addition and subtraction, one can think of negative numbers as debts.
Adding a negative number is the same as subtracting the corresponding positive number:
-
- (if you have $5 and acquire a debt of $3, then you have a net worth of $2)
-
Subtracting a positive number from a smaller positive number yields a negative result:
-
- (if you have $4 and spend $6 then you have a debt of $2).
Subtracting a positive number from any negative number yields a negative result:
-
- (if you have a debt of $3 and spend another $6, you have a debt of $9).
Subtracting a negative is equivalent to adding the corresponding positive:
-
- (if you have a net worth of $5 and you get rid of a debt of $2, then your new net worth is $7).
Also:
-
- (if you have a debt of $8 and get rid of a debt of $3, then you still have a debt of $5).
Multiplication
Multiplication of a negative number by a positive number yields a
negative result: (-2) × 3 = -6. The reason is that this multiplication can be understood as repeated addition: (-2) × 3 = (-2) +
(-2) + (-2) = -6. Alternatively: if you have a debt of $2, and then your debt is tripled, you end up with a debt of $6.
Multiplication of two negative numbers yields a positive result: (-3) × (-4) = 12. This situation cannot be understood as
repeated addition, and the analogy to debts doesn't help either. The ultimate reason for this rule is that we want the distributive law to work:
-
The left hand side of this equation equals 0 × (-4) = 0. The right hand side is a sum of -12 + (-3) × (-4); for the two to be
equal, we need (-3) × (-4) = 12.
Division
Division is similar to multiplication. If both the dividend and the divisor have different signs, the result is
negative:
-
-
If both numbers are of the same sign, the result is positive (even if they are both negative):
-
Formal construction of negative and nonegative integers
In a similar manner to rational numbers, we can extend the natural
numbers N to the integers Z by defining
integers as an ordered pair of natural numbers (a, b). We
can extend addition and multiplication to these pairs with the following rules:
-
-
We define an equivalence relation ~ upon these pairs
with the following rule:
- if and only if
This equivalence relation is compatible with the addition and multiplication defined above, and we may define
Z to be the quotient set N2/~,
i.e. we identify two pairs (a, b) and (c, d) if they are equivalent in the above sense.
We can also define a total order on Z by writing
- if and only if
This will lead to an additive zero of the form (a, a), an additive inverse of (a,
b) of the form (b, a), a multiplicative unit of the form (a+1, a), and a definition
of subtraction
-
Computing
See negative and non-negative
in binary.
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