The Meaning of Negative Numbers
Negative numbers are numbers that are below 0. Now what kind of sense
does it make to talk about numbers that are below 0? Well, you have
heard of temperatures being below zero, but even that is kind of
artificial because if you used the Kelvin scale, you wouldn't have to
deal with them anyway. There are other things that kind of correspond
to negative numbers like below sea level, but it's not like you're gong
to deal with temperature or elevation all of the time. Perhaps a better
reason to have negative numbers is the purely mathematical one, that it
makes our number system more complete and easier to work with.
Particularly when you are doing algebra and are working with unknown
quantities, it is nicer if most if not all of the operations you can
write down are do-able, and negative numbers allow you to subtract
bigger numbers from smaller numbers. This comes up in the real world
too, but it isn't a very pleasant subject. If you have 5 dollars and
you spend 7 dollars then you are in debt 2 dollars, which could be
represented as having -2 dollars.
We can represent negative numbers on the number line by writing them
to the left of 0, since on the number line smaller numbers are written
to the left of larger numbers. When you are comparing negative numbers
with each other you must be careful, because the ones that look bigger
are really smaller. If you are 7 dollars in debt you have less money
than if you are 5 dollars in debt.
Opposites
Another good reason for having negative numbers is that it allows
addition to have something that is called an inverse, which is also
helpful when you study algebra. Every number has a number that can be
added to it to get zero, and this number is called its opposite. To
find the opposite of a number you simply change its sign, so the
opposite of a positive number is a negative number, and the opposite of
a negative number is a positive number. The symbol for opposite is the
same as that for negative so this could be a little confusing. But it
doesn't really matter that much to determine which meaning of the minus
sign is appropriate, because they sort of are the same thing anyway. If
you wanted to, you could simply think of all of the minuses as meaning
opposite, because when it is being used to indicate a negative number,
that number is the opposite of the positive number that the minus sign
is on anyway, so it comes to the same thing. But all you really have to
do is interpret the minus sign as indication of negativeness whenever
that makes sense, and otherwise take it as meaning opposite. This
basically means that the first minus sign on a number means negative
and any further ones mean opposite.
Addition
What adding signed numbers is really about is combining adding and
subtraction into one operation just as multiplying of fractions is
combining multiplication and division into one operation. Adding
positive numbers is adding, and adding negative numbers is subtracting.
If you want to think of it on the number line you start from 0 and when
you add a positive number you go that much to the right, and when you
add a negative number you go that much to the left.
Rules for Adding
If you work this out case by case, you can come up with the rules for
adding plus and minus numbers. Looking at the possibilities for
combinations of signs, you can see that there are 4 possibilities.
+ +
Nothing new here, just add as usual.
+ -
You are going to the right and then to the left, so they are
fighting with each other, and you don't get very far. Ignore the signs
and subtract the bigger one minus the smaller one. The bigger one wins
out as far as which direction you are going, so it determines the sign
of your answer.
- +
You are going to the left and then to the right, so again they are
fighting, so just like in the last case, you ignore the signs and
subtract the bigger one minus the smaller one and the bigger one wins
and determines the sign of your answer.
- -
Now you are going to the left and then going to the left again, so to
determine how far you are going you ignore the signs and add, and since
you will end up to the left of 0, the sign of your answer will be
negative.
Actually you can collapse these rules into two cases, and this gives
you a simpler statement of the rules.
- Like Signs - Add and the sign is the common sign.
- Different Signs - Subtract and use the sign of the bigger one.
Absolute Value
You might have noticed that I referred a couple of times to ignoring
the signs in the above explanation. To avoid having to talk about
ignoring the signs in such explanations and other times when it is
called for, it is convenient to have a name for the number stripped of
its sign, and the name given for this is absolute value. The absolute
value of a number is simply the number without its sign. This means
that if the number is positive, the absolute value of it is just
itself, but if it is negative it is the number you get when you strip
it of its minus sign, that is, the corresponding positive number. On
the number line you can think of absolute value also as the distance
from 0. The notation for the absolute value of a number x is |x|. So
for example |7|=7, but |-4|=4. The answer to an absolute value
evaluation is always positive.
Subtraction
With signed numbers we really don't need subtraction, but sometimes
real world or intuitive reasons lead us to thinking about a problem in
terms of subtraction, so we need a definition that would fit this for
subtraction of signed numbers. Our original subtraction of positive
numbers like 7-5 can be take care of by adding a negative, since 7+-5
give the same answer as 7-5, so we can generalize this to a definition
for subtracting any two signed numbers. So to subtract two signed
numbers you change it into an addition problem by changing the second
number to its opposite. If you know about division of fractions, you
might notice that this is very much like the case there where you
divide my multiplying by the reciprocal. To subtract, change the sign
of the second number and add. And that's really all there is to it. You
just have to remember to do it, and that takes practice.
One thing that I have noticed can be confusing with subtraction is
that the negative sign is the same symbol as the subtraction sign, so
you have to make sure you don't get them confused or make one do double
duty. One way to keep this straight is to draw a circle the two number
and a different colored circle around the subtraction sign. To do this,
first circle the first number. Then the next minus sign you see is the
subtraction sign, so circle that in a different color. The any further
minus sign must be a negative sign attached to a number, so circle
whatever is left with the first color. Then to change the subtraction
to addition, do this. First copy the first number, the one in the first
circle. Then write an addition sign in place of the original
subtraction sign, the one in the different colored circle. Then write
down the opposite of the next number, the one that is circled in the
same color as the first number.
Example 1:
3-7
Solution:
Explanation:
The two numbers are circles in red and the operation sign in blue.
Write down the first number, the 2. Then change the operation to
addition. Then change the sign of the second number. It was a positive
7, so now it becomes a -7. Now for the addition problem we have
different signs, so they are fighting with each other, one number
telling us to go forward and the other number telling us to go
backward, so we subtract and get 4, but since the negative was the
bigger one, it is a -4.
Example 2
-4-9
Solution:
Explanation:
This time the first number is -4 and the second number is 9, circled in
gold with the minus sign circled in green. First write down the -4.
Then change the operation to addition and write the addition plus sign
down. Then change the sign of the second number the 9, which will make
it a -9. Now for the addition problem we have two negative numbers to
add. Since they have the same sign, they both want us to go in the same
direction, so we add them to get 13. But since they are both negative
numbers, it is a negative 13.
Example 3:
6-(-7)
Solution:
Explanation:
This time the first number is 6, and the second number is -7. The
parentheses aren't really necessary here. They are just here to make it
easier to read by keeping the minus signs from running together. Then
we change the problem to an addition problem. First write down the 7.
Then change the subtraction to addition, so write down a plus sign for
that. That change the sign of the second number from negative to
positive to make it a positive 7 instead of a negative 7. Now for the
addition, it is just adding to positive numbers, which we already knew
how to do before learning about negative numbers.
Example 4:
-5-(-6)
Solution:
Explanation:
Again the parentheses aren't really necessary. The two numbers are -5
and -6, so to change it to an addition problem we are adding -5 and 6.
For that addition problem we have different signs, but this time the
positive one is bigger, so we subtract and get a positive answer.
Multiplication
Now lets look at the various combinations of plus and minus for
multiplication of signed numbers.
+ +
No negative numbers here, so nothing new.
+ -
Multiplying by positive numbers means repeated addition, so the same
thing should be true when you multiply it by a negative number. The
repeated addition of a negative number gives a negative number and the
absolute value, that is the size without the minus sign, is simply the
product of the two absolute values
. This means when you
multiply a positive number times a negative number, you multiply
the two numbers ignoring the signs, and the sign of the answer is
negative.
- +
We want multiplication to be commutative, so this should be done the
same way as +-.
- -
This one is slightly trickier to understand, and I've never seen a
convincing physical interpretation of it. Mainly you have to accept
this on the basis that it is the only mathematically consistent way to
define it given the other definitions. There are a number of ways to
think about it. If -+ is - then -- somehow has to be something
different, so it must be +. Or you can think of it as, since -+ is -
then multiplying by a minus must change the sign, so in a minus times a
minus the first minus must change the sign of the second one to plus.
An interesting more formal way of seeing it is to use the distributive
property. Take an example with numbers to make it friendlier.
-5(6+-6)=(-5)(0),
but also by the distributive property
-5(6+-6)=(-5)(6)+(-5)(-6)=-30+(-5)(-6).
So whatever (-5)(-6) is, when you add it to -30 you have to get 0,
and the only thing you can add to -30 and get 0 is 30. Anyway, however
you see it, it seems that the only possible thing for the product of
two negatives to be is a positive. I know two wrongs don't make a
right, but strange as it seems, in mathematics the product of two
negatives is indeed a positive.
I think one important thing to think about if you get bothered by
the idea of negative times negative being positive is that
multiplication is really a much more complicated operation than
addition, and it is definitively not the same as addition. If you are
thinking this can't be true because two wrongs don't make a right, you
need to realize that combining two wrongs is adding them, not
multiplying. Multiplying two negative numbers is something different.
If multiplication is repeated addition, what does it mean to repeatedly
add something a negative number of times? That doesn't really literally
make a lot of sense. Before you can decide what a negative times a
negative should be, you have to first decide what is meant by
multiplying by a negative number. To some extent we define negative
times negative without really thinking about this, and just defining it
the only way it would make sense given the above considerations, but if
we were to give some thought to what multiplication by a negative means
possibly the best way to think about it would be as repeated
subtraction. Since multiplying by a positive number is repeated
addition, it would make sense to think of multiplication by a negative
number as repeated subtraction, and that indeed would make the product
of two negatives a positive, since subtracting a negative is the same
as adding a positive.
Extra for Experts: If you are a more advanced student or instructor
or parent, who has learned about quadratic equations, and you would
like to learn about another reason that minus times minus is plus, read
my article A Geometrical Approach to Completing
the Square.
Again just like with addition we can make this easier to remember by
collapsing it down to just two cases, and here it is really much
simpler that with addition, because with multiplication you always
multiply, so all you have to worry about is what the sign of the answer
will be.
- Always multiply
- Like signs, sign is +
- Different signs, sign is -
Big Products
For multiplying it is also interesting to see what happens when you
multiply several different numbers. What happens then is every time you
have two minus signs the get together and make a plus. so for each
minus sign the answer flip flops between - and +, so to determine the
sign of your answer you just need to count up the minuses and see
whether it is even or odd. If it is even the answer is +, and if it is
odd the answer is -.
Multiplication and Addition
It is interesting to compare the rules for multiplication with those
for additions so that you don't get them confused.
- For multiplication you always multiply, but for addition
sometimes you add and sometimes you subtract.
- For both multiplication and addition you do different things
depending on whether the signs are like or different.
- For multiplication like signs mean the answer is +, and
for addition like signs mean you add and the sign is the common
sign.
- For multiplication different signs mean the answer is -, and for
addition different signs means you subtract and the sign is the
sign of the larger.
- Multiplication ++=+, Addition ++=+.
- Multiplication +-=-, Addition +-=the sign of the larger.
- Multiplication -+=-, Addition -+=the sign of the larger.
- Multiplication --=+, Addition --=-.
Powers
Powers mean repeated multiplication, so from the rules for multiplying
you should be able to raise numbers to powers. When you raise negative
numbers to powers you can also use our rule about counting the minus
signs. When you raise a negative number to an even power, then you have
an even number of minus signs, so the answer is +. when you raise a
negative number to an odd power there are an odd number of minus signs,
so the answer is -.
A little Notational Matter
There is a little thing you have to be careful with in the notation of
negative numbers raised to powers. When you wish to denote a negative
number raised to a power you always enclose it in parentheses. So when
you wish to write -2 raised to the 5th power, you write it
the reason for this is that because multiplying by -1 puts a minus sign
on a number we think of the minus signs on numbers as equal to
multiplying in the order of operations. That means that powers get done
before minus signs get attached to numbers, so if you write
this doesn't mean -2 is being raised to the 5th power, instead because
the power gets done first, it means that 2 is getting raised to the
5th, and then the minus sign is attached to that number.
Division
The same rules about signs hold for division as for multiplication.
Also if you have a problem that is all multiplication and division, you
can just ignore the signs and then figure out what the sign of the
answer is by counting up the minuses and if it is even the answer is
plus and if it is odd the answer is minus. But be careful, you can only
do this if the problem is all multiplication and division.