Visualizing Square Root and Absolute Value

Taking the absolute value of a number leaves the number unchanged if the number is non-negative and changes the sign of the number otherwise. Thus, when you take the absolute value of a function, the effect on the graph is to leave portions above the
x
axis unchanged and to reflect portions below the
x
axis through the
x
axis.
You can only take (real) square roots of non-negative numbers, so when you take the square root of a function, the portion of the graph below the
x
axis disappears, while the portion above the
x
axis is distorted by the taking of square roots.
In this Demonstration, you can take the square root or absolute value of a function and see the effect. The original function is shown as a purple, dashed curve. If both boxes are checked, the graph shown will be that of
|x|
, because
|
x
|
is the same as
x
for real-valued
x
.

External Links

Absolute Value (Wolfram MathWorld)
Square Root (Wolfram MathWorld)

Permanent Citation

Chris Boucher
​
​"Visualizing Square Root and Absolute Value"​
​http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/VisualizingSquareRootAndAbsoluteValue/​
​Wolfram Demonstrations Project​
​Published: September 28, 2007