Key Concepts & Glossary
Key Concepts
- The absolute value function is commonly used to measure distances between points.
- Applied problems, such as ranges of possible values, can also be solved using the absolute value function.
- The graph of the absolute value function resembles a letter V. It has a corner point at which the graph changes direction.
- In an absolute value equation, an unknown variable is the input of an absolute value function.
- If the absolute value of an expression is set equal to a positive number, expect two solutions for the unknown variable.
- An absolute value equation may have one solution, two solutions, or no solutions.
- An absolute value inequality is similar to an absolute value equation but takes the form [latex]|A|<B,|A|\le B,|A|>B,\text{ or }|A|\ge B\\[/latex]. It can be solved by determining the boundaries of the solution set and then testing which segments are in the set.
- Absolute value inequalities can also be solved graphically.
Glossary
- absolute value equation
- an equation of the form [latex]|A|=B\\[/latex], with [latex]B\ge 0\\[/latex]; it will have solutions when [latex]A=B\\[/latex] or [latex]A=-B\\[/latex]
- absolute value inequality
- a relationship in the form [latex]|{ A }|<{ B },|{ A }|\le { B },|{ A }|>{ B },\text{or }|{ A }|\ge{ B }\\[/latex]
Licenses & Attributions
CC licensed content, Shared previously
- Precalculus. Provided by: OpenStax Authored by: Jay Abramson, et al.. Located at: https://openstax.org/books/precalculus/pages/1-introduction-to-functions. License: CC BY: Attribution. License terms: Download For Free at : http://cnx.org/contents/[email protected]..