Magnitude
A magnitude is a measure of the size of a mathematical entity. For example, the magnitude of a complex number is the distance from the number (graphed on the complex plane) to the origin, a measure of the size of a complex number. The magnitude is generally a nonnegative real number.
Formulaically, the magnitude of a real number is its absolute value
, sometimes written
. The magnitude
of a complex number
equals
. Both types of magnitude are bound by a form of the Triangle Inequality which states that
.
Homomorphism property
For complex numbers and
, we have the identity
. Because the absolute value of a real number equals its magnitude when treated as a complex number, the identity also holds for absolute values of real numbers.
Proof
Let and
be complex numbers.
We have so
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