Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.4  The Birth of Irrational and Real Numbers

Some roots never come out — and they force us to invent a bigger family of numbers.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 5 of 5 in this lesson: 6.4.5 Opposites and absolute value of real numbers

6.4.5 Opposites and absolute value of real numbers

Everything you learned about opposites and absolute value back in Stage 5 still works perfectly — now including the irrationals. Two points mirrored across the origin are opposites. The opposite of √2 is −√2; one sits about 1.414 to the right of zero, the other about 1.414 to the left. Adding a number to its opposite always gives 0: √2 + (−√2) = 0.

The absolute value |x| is the distance from 0 to the point x — and a distance is never negative. So |√2| = √2 and |−√2| = √2 as well: a point and its opposite are the same distance from zero, just on opposite sides. This is exactly the rule you know for integers — |3| = 3 and |−3| = 3 — applied without change to an irrational. The number being "endless and pattern-free" makes no difference to how far it sits from the origin.

√2 and −√2 are mirror images across the origin; both sit the same distance √2 from zero, so |√2| = |−√2| = √2.
Watch out

Absolute value strips a number down to its distance, so the answer is never negative — but it does not simply "make the number positive by deleting the minus sign" in a careless way. |−√2| = √2 because √2 is the distance; the bars report how far, not which side.

🎮 Try itOpposite & absolute value on the line

Slide a point — including right onto √2 — and watch its opposite and its distance to zero update together.

Point x
eastmath.com · 6.4 The Birth of Irrational and Real Numbers · 6.4.5 Opposites and absolute value of real numbers