Everyone knows what a number is! I'm not going to give a definition of number here (I
wouldn't know where to begin). But I'd like to use this page to explain
a few properties that numbers have; which I'll refer back to elsewhere
on this site.
Numbers are usually one-dimensional
All numbers have a magnitude and a direction.
One dimensional?
Allow me to provide a few examples: the number 2342.5 is one
dimensional. The number 1 is one dimensional. The speed at which a car
travels is one dimensional. In fact, just about all numbers you
encounter in everyday life are one dimensional.
We live in a three dimensional world. You can move (1) left or right, while
simultaneously moving (2) up
or down and (3) foreward
or backward. A sheet of paper is a two dimensional
surface. A line drawn on the surface of a page can only run (1) left or right and
(2) up or down
at each point on that line. And a number like the total distance you
walk each day, or the speed of a car, is one dimensional. You can
only increase or
decrease the distance you walk each day. The needle on a
car speedometer can only move clockwise
or counterclockwise.
For instance, any number you add/subtract/multiply/divide the number 10
(or 1, or 2342.5, or ...) by, can only ever yield a result which is
either larger or smaller
than 10.
Imagine that the following number line is infinitely long. The number
10 can be expressed as a notch on the line, along with most
other
numbers. Adding a positive number to 10 yields a result which is
situated to the right of 10. Subtracting a number from 10 (which is
equivalent to adding
a
negative number to 10) gives a result shifted to the left of 10. You
can't add two numbers together and get a result which is above or below
the line itself! Being one dimensional, they are restricted to only
existing along the length of the number line. (But you must be
thinking; this is obvious! Well, in later sections, I'll discuss complex numbers and vectors; neither of which are
restricted to a one dimensional number line - but you needn't worry
about those at this stage.)
Magnitude?
The magnitude of a number is simply the distance of that number from
zero. So the magnitude of the number 10 (written as |10| ) is
10, and |-10| (i.e. the magnitude of negative ten) is
also 10; as both 10 and -10 are a distance of 10 units from zero.
Direction?
The numbers 10 and -10 have equal magnitude, but if you take say, the
number 5.3; and add the number 10 to it, you get a result situated 10
units to the right of 5.3 on the number line - that is to say, you get
5.3 + 10 = 15.3
If on the other hand, you add -10 to 5.3, you get a result shifted 10
units to the left of 5.3 on the number line.
That is, you get 5.3 + -10 = - 4.7
So in the case of these simple 1 dimensional numbers, each number can
point in one of two directions: positive or negative. Just as
the
magnitude of a number is its distance from zero, the direction of a
number is simply the direction in which you'd need to travel, starting
from zero, in order to reach that number.
If you know the magnitude and direction of a number, then you know
everything about that number.
Incidently, the zero point is often referred to as the origin, since
the
magnitudes and directions of all numbers are taken relative to zero.
Scalars
Isn't the word scalar
is a scary sounding term? Actually it's just the technical
term for any one-dimensional number.
Scalars are so called because multiplying any number by a scalar simply
scales its magnitude by that amount. Multiplying the number 10 by 2 for
example, simply scales 10 up by a factor of 2, to give a result of 20.
The direction of the number is unaffected, unless the number is
multiplied by a negative scalar; in which case the direction is
reversed. So while 2×10 = 20,
-2×10 = -20. In the latter case,
the direction is reversed due to scaling by a negative number.