Elementary algebra is the main form of algebra taught in school and examines mathematical statements using variables for unspecified values. It seeks to determine for which values the statements are true. To do so, it uses different methods of transforming equations to isolate variables.
Linear algebra is a closely related field that investigates
linear equations and combinations of them called systems of linear equations. It provides methods to find the values that solve all equations in the system at the same time, and to study the set of these solutions.
Abstract algebra studies algebraic structures, which consist of a
set of
mathematical objects together with one or several
operations defined on that set. It is a generalization of elementary and linear algebra, since it allows mathematical objects other than numbers and non-arithmetic operations. It distinguishes between different types of algebraic structures, such as
groups,
rings, and
fields, based on the number of operations they use and the
laws they follow.
Universal algebra and
category theory provide general frameworks to investigate abstract patterns that characterize different classes of algebraic structures.
Algebraic methods were first studied in the
ancient period to solve specific problems in fields like
geometry. Subsequent mathematicians examined general techniques to solve equations independent of their specific applications. They described equations and their solutions using words and abbreviations until the 16th and 17th centuries, when a rigorous symbolic formalism was developed. In the mid-19th century, the scope of algebra broadened beyond a
theory of equations to cover diverse types of algebraic operations and structures. Algebra is relevant to many branches of mathematics, such as geometry,
topology,
number theory, and
calculus, and other fields of inquiry, like
logic and the
empirical sciences.
Definition and etymology
Algebra is the branch of mathematics that studies
algebraic structures and the
operations they use.[1] An algebraic structure is a non-empty
set of
mathematical objects, such as the
integers, together with algebraic operations defined on that set, like
addition and
multiplication.[2][a] Algebra explores the laws, general characteristics, and types of algebraic structures. Within certain algebraic structures, it examines the use of
variables in
equations and how to manipulate these equations.[4][b]
Algebra is often understood as a generalization of
arithmetic.[8] Arithmetic studies operations like addition,
subtraction, multiplication, and
division, in a particular domain of numbers, such as the real numbers.[9]Elementary algebra constitutes the first level of abstraction. Like arithmetic, it restricts itself to specific types of numbers and operations. It generalizes these operations by allowing indefinite quantities in the form of variables in addition to numbers.[10] A higher level of abstraction is found in
abstract algebra, which is not limited to a particular domain and examines algebraic structures such as
groups and
rings. It extends beyond typical arithmetic operations by also covering other types of operations.[11] Universal algebra is still more abstract in that it is not interested in specific algebraic structures but investigates the characteristics of algebraic structures in general.[12]
The word algebra comes from the
Arabic term الجبر (al-jabr), which originally referred to the surgical treatment of
bonesetting. In the 9th century, the term received a mathematical meaning when the Persian mathematician
Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi employed it to describe a method of solving equations and used it in the title of a treatise on algebra, al-Kitāb al-Mukhtaṣar fī Ḥisāb al-Jabr wal-Muqābalah [The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing] which was translated into Latin as Liber Algebrae et Almucabola.[c] The word entered the English language in the 16th century from
Italian,
Spanish, and medieval
Latin.[18] Initially, its meaning was restricted to the
theory of equations, that is, to the art of manipulating
polynomial equations in view of solving them. This changed in the 19th century[d] when the scope of algebra broadened to cover the study of diverse types of algebraic operations and structures together with their underlying
axioms, the laws they follow.[21]
Elementary algebra, also called school algebra, college algebra, and classical algebra,[22] is the oldest and most basic form of algebra. It is a generalization of
arithmetic that relies on
variables and examines how mathematical
statements may be transformed.[23]
Arithmetic is the study of numerical operations and investigates how numbers are combined and transformed using the arithmetic operations of
addition,
subtraction,
multiplication,
division,
exponentiation, extraction of
roots, and
logarithm. For example, the operation of addition combines two numbers, called the addends, into a third number, called the sum, as in .[9]
Elementary algebra relies on the same operations while allowing variables in addition to regular numbers. Variables are
symbols for unspecified or unknown quantities. They make it possible to state relationships for which one does not know the exact values and to express general laws that are true, independent of which numbers are used. For example, the
equation belongs to arithmetic and expresses an equality only for these specific numbers. By replacing the numbers with variables, it is possible to express a general law that applies to any possible combination of numbers, like the
commutative property of multiplication, which is expressed in the equation .[23]
Algebraic expressions are formed by using arithmetic operations to combine variables and numbers. By convention, the lowercase letters , , and represent variables. In some cases, subscripts are added to distinguish variables, as in , , and . The lowercase letters , , and are usually used for
constants and
coefficients.[e] The expression is an algebraic expression created by multiplying the number 5 with the variable and adding the number 3 to the result. Other examples of algebraic expressions are and .[25]
Some algebraic expressions take the form of statements that relate two expressions to one another. An equation is a statement formed by comparing two expressions, saying that they are equal. This can be expressed using the
equals sign (), as in .Inequations involve a different type of comparison, saying that the two sides are different. This can be expressed using symbols such as the
less-than sign (), the
greater-than sign (), and the inequality sign (). Unlike other expressions, statements can be true or false and their truth value usually depends on the values of the variables. For example, the statement is true if is either 2 or −2 and false otherwise.[26] Equations with variables can be divided into identity equations and conditional equations. Identity equations are true for all values that can be assigned to the variables, such as the equation . Conditional equations are only true for some values. For example, the equation is only true if is 5.[27]
The main goal of elementary algebra is to determine the values for which a statement is true. This can be achieved by transforming and manipulating statements according to certain rules. A key principle guiding this process is that whatever operation is applied to one side of an equation also needs to be done to the other side. For example, if one subtracts 5 from the left side of an equation one also needs to subtract 5 from the right side to balance both sides. The goal of these steps is usually to isolate the variable one is interested in on one side, a process known as
solving the equation for that variable. For example, the equation can be solved for by adding 7 to both sides, which isolates on the left side and results in the equation .[28]
There are many other techniques used to solve equations. Simplification is employed to replace a complicated expression with an equivalent simpler one. For example, the expression can be replaced with the expression since by the distributive property.[29] For statements with several variables,
substitution is a common technique to replace one variable with an equivalent expression that does not use this variable. For example, if one knows that then one can simplify the expression to arrive at . In a similar way, if one knows the value of one variable one may be able to use it to determine the value of other variables.[30]
Algebraic equations can be interpreted
geometrically to describe spatial figures in the form of a
graph. To do so, the different variables in the equation are understood as
coordinates and the values that solve the equation are interpreted as points of a graph. For example, if is set to zero in the equation , then must be −1 for the equation to be true. This means that the -pair is part of the graph of the equation. The -pair , by contrast, does not solve the equation and is therefore not part of the graph. The graph encompasses the totality of -pairs that solve the equation.[31]
A polynomial is an expression consisting of one or more terms that are added or subtracted from each other, like . Each term is either a constant, a variable, or a product of a constant and variables. Each variable can be raised to a positive-integer power. A monomial is a polynomial with one term while two- and three-term polynomials are called binomials and trinomials. The
degree of a polynomial is the maximal value (among its terms) of the sum of the exponents of the variables (4 in the above example).[32] Polynomials of degree one are called linear polynomials. Linear algebra studies systems of linear polynomials.[33] A polynomial is said to be univariate or multivariate, depending on whether it uses one or more variables.[34]
Factorization is a method used to simplify polynomials, making it easier to analyze them and determine the values for which they
evaluate to zero. Factorization consists in rewriting a polynomial as a product of several factors. For example, the polynomial can be factorized as . The polynomial as a whole is zero if and only if one of its factors is zero, i.e., if is either −2 or 5.[35] Before the 19th century, much of algebra was devoted to
polynomial equations, that is
equations obtained by equating a polynomial to zero. The first attempts for solving polynomial equations was to express the solutions in terms of
nth roots. The solution of a second-degree polynomial equation of the form is given by the
quadratic formula[36]
Solutions for the degrees 3 and 4 are given by the
cubic and
quartic formulas. There are no general solutions for higher degrees, as proven in the 19th century by the so-called
Abel–Ruffini theorem.[37] Even when general solutions do not exist, approximate solutions can be found by numerical tools like the
Newton–Raphson method.[38]
The
fundamental theorem of algebra asserts that every univariate polynomial equation of positive degree with
real or
complex coefficients has at least one complex solution. Consequently, every polynomial of a positive degree can be
factorized into linear polynomials. This theorem was proved at the beginning of the 19th century, but this does not close the problem since the theorem does not provide any way for computing the solutions.[39]
Linear algebra starts with the study
systems of linear equations.[40] An
equation is linear if it can be expressed in the form where , , ..., and are constants. Examples are and . A system of linear equations is a set of linear equations for which one is interested in common solutions.[41]
Matrices are rectangular arrays of values that have been originally introduced for having a compact and synthetic notation for systems of linear equations[42] For example, the system of equations
can be written as
where and are the matrices
Under some conditions on the number of rows and columns, matrices can be
added,
multiplied, and sometimes
inverted. All methods for solving linear systems may be expressed as matrix manipulations using these operations. For example, solving the above system consists of computing an inverted matrix such that where is the
identity matrix. Then, multiplying on the left both members of the above matrix equation by one gets the solution of the system of linear equations as[43]
Methods of solving systems of linear equations range from the introductory, like substitution[44] and elimination,[45] to more advanced techniques using matrices, such as
Cramer's rule, the
Gaussian elimination, and
LU decomposition.[46] Some systems of equations are
inconsistent, meaning that no solutions exist because the equations contradict each other.[47][f] Consistent systems have either one unique solution or an infinite number of solutions.[48][g]
The study of
vector spaces and
linear maps form a large part of linear algebra. A vector space is an algebraic structure formed by a set with an addition that makes it an
abelian group and a
scalar multiplication that is compatible with addition (see
vector space for details). A linear map is a function between vector spaces that is compatible with addition and scalar multiplication. In the case of
finite-dimensional vector spaces, vectors and linear maps can be represented by matrices. It follows that the theories of matrices and finite-dimensional vector spaces are essentially the same. In particular, vector spaces provide a third way for expressing and manipulating systems of linear equations.[49] From this perspective, a matrix is a representation of a linear map: if one chooses a particular
basis to describe the vectors being transformed, then the entries in the matrix give the results of applying the linear map to the basis vectors.[50]
Systems of equations can be interpreted as geometric figures. For systems with two variables, each equation represents a
line in
two-dimensional space. The point where the two lines intersect is the solution of the full system because this is the only point that solves both the first and the second equation. For inconsistent systems, the two lines run parallel, meaning that there is no solution since they never intersect. If two equations are not independent then they describe the same line, meaning that every solution of one equation is also a solution of the other equation. These relations make it possible to seek solutions graphically by plotting the equations and determining where they intersect.[51] The same principles also apply to systems of equations with more variables, with the difference being that the equations do not describe lines but higher dimensional figures. For instance, equations with three variables correspond to
planes in
three-dimensional space, and the points where all planes intersect solve the system of equations.[52]
Abstract algebra, also called modern algebra,[53] is the study of
algebraic structures. An algebraic structure is a framework for understanding
operations on
mathematical objects, like the addition of numbers. While elementary algebra and linear algebra work within the confines of particular algebraic structures, abstract algebra takes a more general approach that compares how algebraic structures differ from each other and what types of algebraic structures there are, such as
groups,
rings, and
fields.[54] The key difference between these types of algebraic structures lies in the number of operations they use and the laws they obey.[55] In
mathematics education, abstract algebra refers to an advanced
undergraduate course that mathematics majors take after completing courses in linear algebra.[56]
On a formal level, an algebraic structure is a
set[h] of mathematical objects, called the underlying set, together with one or several operations.[i] Abstract algebra is primarily interested in
binary operations,[j] which take any two objects from the underlying set as inputs and map them to another object from this set as output.[60] For example, the algebraic structure has the
natural numbers () as the underlying set and addition () as its binary operation.[58] The underlying set can contain mathematical objects other than numbers and the operations are not restricted to regular arithmetic operations.[61] For instance, the underlying set of the
symmetry group of a geometric object is made up of
geometric transformations, such as
rotations, under which the object remains
unchanged. Its binary operation is
function composition, which takes two transformations as input and has the transformation resulting from applying the first transformation followed by the second as its output.[62]
Abstract algebra classifies algebraic structures based on the laws or
axioms that its operations obey and the number of operations it uses. One of the most basic types is a group, which has one operation and requires that this operation is
associative and has an
identity element and
inverse elements. An operation is associative if the order of several applications does not matter, i.e., if [k] is the same as for all elements. An operation has an identity element or a neutral element if one element e exists that does not change the value of any other element, i.e., if . An operation has inverse elements if for any element there exists a reciprocal element that undoes . If an element operates on its inverse then the result is the neutral element e, expressed formally as . Every algebraic structure that fulfills these requirements is a group.[64] For example, is a group formed by the set of
integers together with the operation of addition. The neutral element is 0 and the inverse element of any number is .[65] The natural numbers with addition, by contrast, do not form a group since they contain only positive integers and therefore lack inverse elements.[66]
A ring is an algebraic structure with two operations that work similarly to addition and multiplication of numbers and are named and generally denoted similarly. A ring is a
commutative group under addition: the addition of the ring is associative, commutative, and has an identity element and inverse elements. The multiplication is associative and
distributive with respect to addition; that is, and Moreover, multiplication is associative and has an
identity element generally denoted as 1.[69][l] Multiplication needs not to be commutative; if it is commutative, one has a
commutative ring.[71] The
ring of integers () is one of the simplest commutative rings.[72]
A field is a commutative ring such that and each nonzero element has a
multiplicative inverse.[73] The ring of integers does not form a field because it lacks multiplicative inverses. For example, the multiplicative inverse of is , which is not an integer. The
rational numbers, the
real numbers, and the
complex numbers each form a field with the operations of addition and multiplication.[74]
Besides groups, rings, and fields, there are many other algebraic structures studied by algebra. They include
magmas,
semigroups,
monoids,
abelian groups,
commutative rings,
modules,
lattices,
vector spaces,
algebras over a field, and
associative and
non-associative algebras. They differ from each other in regard to the types of objects they describe and the requirements that their operations fulfill. Many are related to each other in that a basic structure can be turned into a more advanced structure by adding additional requirements.[55] For example, a magma becomes a semigroup if its operation is associative.[78]
Homomorphisms are tools to examine structural features by comparing two algebraic structures.[79] A homomorphism is a function from the underlying set of one algebraic structure to the underlying set of another algebraic structure that preserves certain structural characteristics. If the two algebraic structures use binary operations and have the form and then the function is a homomorphism if it fulfills the following requirement: . The existence of a homomorphism reveals that the operation in the second algebraic structure plays the same role as the operation does in the first algebraic structure.[80]Isomorphisms are a special type of homomorphism that indicates a high degree of similarity between two algebraic structures. An isomorphism is a
bijective homomorphism, meaning that it establishes a one-to-one relationship between the elements of the two algebraic structures. This implies that every element of the first algebraic structure is mapped to one unique element in the second structure without any unmapped elements in the second structure.[81]
Another tool of comparison is the relation between an algebraic structure and its
subalgebra.[82] The algebraic structure and its subalgebra use the same operations,[m] which follow the same axioms. The only difference is that the underlying set of the subalgebra is a subset of the underlying set of the algebraic structure.[n] All operations in the subalgebra are required to be
closed in its underlying set, meaning that they only produce elements that belong to this set.[82] For example, the set of
even integers together with addition is a subalgebra of the full set of integers together with addition. This is the case because the sum of two even numbers is again an even number. But the set of odd integers together with addition is not a subalgebra because it is not closed: adding two odd numbers produces an even number, which is not part of the chosen subset.[83]
Universal algebra is the study of algebraic structures in general. As part of its general perspective, it is not concerned with the specific elements that make up the underlying sets and considers operations with more than two inputs, such as
ternary operations. It provides a framework for investigating what structural features different algebraic structures have in common.[85][o] One of those structural features concerns the
identities that are true in different algebraic structures. In this context, an identity is a
universal equation or an equation that is true for all elements of the underlying set. For example, commutativity is a universal equation that states that is identical to for all elements.[87] A
variety is a class of all algebraic structures that satisfy certain identities. For example, if two algebraic structures satisfy commutativity then they are both part of the corresponding variety.[88][p][q]
Category theory examines how mathematical objects are related to each other using the concept of
categories. A category is a collection of objects together with a collection of so-called
morphisms or "arrows" between those objects. These two collections must satisfy certain conditions. For example, morphisms can be joined, or composed: if there exists a morphism from object to object , and another morphism from object to object , then there must also exist one from object to object . Composition of morphisms is required to be associative, and there must be an "identity morphism" for every object.[92] Categories are widely used in contemporary mathematics since they provide a unifying framework to describe and analyze many fundamental mathematical concepts. For example, sets can be described with the
category of sets, and any group can be regarded as the morphisms of a category with just one object.[93]
The origin of algebra lies in attempts to solve mathematical problems involving arithmetic calculations and unknown quantities. These developments happened in the ancient period in
Babylonia,
Egypt,
Greece,
China, and
India. One of the earliest documents on algebraic problems is the
Rhind Mathematical Papyrus from ancient Egypt, which was written around 1650 BCE.[r] It discusses solutions to
linear equations, as expressed in problems like "A quantity; its fourth is added to it. It becomes fifteen. What is the quantity?" Babylonian clay tablets from around the same time explain methods to solve linear and
quadratic polynomial equations, such as the method of
completing the square.[95]
Many of these insights found their way to the ancient Greeks. Starting in the 6th century BCE, their main interest was geometry rather than algebra, but they employed algebraic methods to solve geometric problems. For example, they studied geometric figures while taking their lengths and areas as unknown quantities to be determined, as exemplified in
Pythagoras' formulation of the
difference of two squares method and later in
Euclid's Elements.[96] In the 3rd century CE,
Diophantus provided a detailed treatment of how to solve algebraic equations in a series of books called Arithmetica. He was the first to experiment with symbolic notation to express polynomials.[97] Diophantus's work influenced Arab development of algebra with many of his methods reflected in the concepts and techniques used in medieval Arabic algebra.[98] In ancient China, The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art, a book composed over the period spanning from the 10th century BCE to the 2nd century CE,[99] explored various techniques for solving algebraic equations, including the use of matrix-like constructs.[100]
There is no unanimity as to whether these early developments are part of algebra or only precursors. They offered solutions to algebraic problems but did not conceive them in an abstract and general manner, focusing instead on specific cases and applications.[101] This changed with the Persian mathematician
al-Khwarizmi,[s] who published his The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing in 825 CE. It presents the first detailed treatment of general methods that can be used to manipulate linear and quadratic equations by "reducing" and "balancing" both sides.[103] Other influential contributions to algebra came from the Arab mathematician
Thābit ibn Qurra also in the 9th century and the Persian mathematician
Omar Khayyam in the 11th and 12th centuries.[104]
In India,
Brahmagupta investigated how to solve quadratic equations and systems of equations with several variables in the 7th century CE. Among his innovations were the use of zero and negative numbers in algebraic equations.[105] The Indian mathematicians
Mahāvīra in the 9th century and
Bhāskara II in the 12th century further refined Brahmagupta's methods and concepts.[106] In 1247, the Chinese mathematician
Qin Jiushao wrote the Mathematical Treatise in Nine Sections, which includes
an algorithm for the
numerical evaluation of polynomials, including polynomials of higher degrees.[107]
François Viète (left) and
René Descartes invented a symbolic notation to express equations in an abstract and concise manner.
The Italian mathematician
Fibonacci brought al-Khwarizmi's ideas and techniques to Europe in books including his Liber Abaci.[108] In 1545, the Italian polymath
Gerolamo Cardano published his book Ars Magna, which covered many topics in algebra, discussed
imaginary numbers, and was the first to present general methods for solving
cubic and
quartic equations.[109] In the 16th and 17th centuries, the French mathematicians
François Viète and
René Descartes introduced letters and symbols to denote variables and operations, making it possible to express equations in an abstract and concise manner. Their predecessors had relied on verbal descriptions of problems and solutions.[110] Some historians see this development as a key turning point in the history of algebra and consider what came before it as the prehistory of algebra because it lacked the abstract nature based on symbolic manipulation.[111]
In the 17th and 18th centuries, many attempts were made to find general solutions to polynomials of degree five and higher. All of them failed.[37] At the end of the 18th century, the German mathematician
Carl Friedrich Gauss proved the
fundamental theorem of algebra, which describes the existence of
zeros of polynomials of any degree without providing a general solution.[19] At the beginning of the 19th century, the Italian mathematician
Paolo Ruffini and the Norwegian mathematician
Niels Henrik Abel were
able to show that no general solution exists for polynomials of degree five and higher.[37] In response to and shortly after their findings, the French mathematician
Évariste Galois developed what came later to be known as
Galois theory, which offered a more in-depth analysis of the solutions of polynomials while also laying the foundation of
group theory.[20] Mathematicians soon realized the relevance of group theory to other fields and applied it to disciplines like geometry and number theory.[112]
Starting in the mid-19th century, interest in algebra shifted from the study of polynomials associated with elementary algebra towards a more general inquiry into algebraic structures, marking the emergence of
abstract algebra. This approach explored the axiomatic basis of arbitrary algebraic operations.[113] The invention of new algebraic systems based on different operations and elements accompanied this development, such as
Boolean algebra,
vector algebra, and
matrix algebra.[114] Influential early developments in abstract algebra were made by the German mathematicians
David Hilbert,
Ernst Steinitz, and
Emmy Noether as well as the Austrian mathematician
Emil Artin. They researched different forms of algebraic structures and categorized them based on their underlying axioms into types, like groups, rings, and fields.[115]
The idea of the even more general approach associated with universal algebra was conceived by the English mathematician
Alfred North Whitehead in his 1898 book A Treatise on Universal Algebra. Starting in the 1930s, the American mathematician
Garrett Birkhoff expanded these ideas and developed many of the foundational concepts of this field.[116] The invention of universal algebra led to the emergence of various new areas focused on the algebraization of mathematics—that is, the application of algebraic methods to other branches of mathematics. Topological algebra arose in the early 20th century, studying algebraic structures such as
topological groups and
Lie groups.[117] In the 1940s and 50s,
homological algebra emerged, employing algebraic techniques to study
homology.[118] Around the same time,
category theory was developed and has since played a key role in the
foundations of mathematics.[119] Other developments were the formulation of
model theory and the study of
free algebras.[120]
The influence of algebra is wide-reaching, both within mathematics and in its applications to other fields.[121] The algebraization of mathematics is the process of applying algebraic methods and principles to other
branches of mathematics, such as
geometry,
topology,
number theory, and
calculus. It happens by employing symbols in the form of variables to express mathematical insights on a more general level, allowing mathematicians to develop formal models describing how objects interact and relate to each other.[122]
One application, found in geometry, is the use of algebraic statements to describe geometric figures. For example, the equation describes a line in two-dimensional space while the equation corresponds to a
sphere in three-dimensional space. Of special interest to
algebraic geometry are
algebraic varieties,[t] which are solutions to
systems of polynomial equations that can be used to describe more complex geometric figures.[124] Algebraic reasoning can also solve geometric problems. For example, one can determine whether and where the line described by intersects with the circle described by by solving the system of equations made up of these two equations.[125] Topology studies the properties of geometric figures or
topological spaces that are preserved under operations of
continuous deformation.
Algebraic topology relies on algebraic theories such as
group theory to classify topological spaces. For example,
homotopy groups classify topological spaces based on the existence of
loops or
holes in them.[126]
Number theory is concerned with the properties of and relations between integers.
Algebraic number theory applies algebraic methods and principles to this field of inquiry. Examples are the use of algebraic expressions to describe general laws, like
Fermat's Last Theorem, and of algebraic structures to analyze the behavior of numbers, such as the
ring of integers.[127] The related field of
combinatorics uses algebraic techniques to solve problems related to counting, arrangement, and combination of discrete objects. An example in
algebraic combinatorics is the application of group theory to analyze
graphs and symmetries.[128] The insights of algebra are also relevant to calculus, which uses mathematical expressions to examine
rates of change and
accumulation. It relies on algebra, for instance, to understand how these expressions can be transformed and what role variables play in them.[129]Algebraic logic employs the methods of algebra to describe and analyze the structures and patterns that underlie
logical reasoning,[130] exploring both the relevant mathematical structures themselves and their application to concrete problems of logic.[131] It includes the study of
Boolean algebra to describe
propositional logic[132] as well as the formulation and analysis of algebraic structures corresponding to more complex
systems of logic.[133]
Algebra education mostly focuses on elementary algebra, which is one of the reasons why elementary algebra is also called school algebra. It is usually not introduced until
secondary education since it requires mastery of the fundamentals of arithmetic while posing new cognitive challenges associated with abstract reasoning and generalization.[143] It aims to familiarize students with the formal side of mathematics by helping them understand mathematical symbolism, for example, how variables can be used to represent unknown quantities. An additional difficulty for students lies in the fact that, unlike arithmetic calculations, algebraic expressions are often difficult to solve directly. Instead, students need to learn how to transform them according to certain laws, often with the goal of determining an unknown quantity.[144]
Some tools to introduce students to the abstract side of algebra rely on concrete models and visualizations of equations, including geometric analogies, manipulatives including sticks or cups, and "function machines" representing equations as
flow diagrams. One method uses
balance scales as a pictorial approach to help students grasp basic problems of algebra. The mass of some objects on the scale is unknown and represents variables. Solving an equation corresponds to adding and removing objects on both sides in such a way that the sides stay in balance until the only object remaining on one side is the object of unknown mass.[145]Word problems are another tool to show how algebra is applied to real-life situations. For example, students may be presented with a situation in which Naomi's brother has twice as many apples as Naomi. Given that both together have twelve apples, students are then asked to find an algebraic equation that describes this situation () and to determine how many apples Naomi has ().[146]
At the university level, mathematics students encounter advanced algebra topics from linear and abstract algebra. Initial
undergraduate courses in linear algebra focus on matrices, vector spaces, and linear maps. Upon completing them, students are usually introduced to abstract algebra, where they learn about algebraic structures like groups, rings, and fields, as well as the relations between them. The curriculum typically also covers specific instances of algebraic structures, such as the systems of the rational numbers, the real numbers, and the polynomials.[147]
See also
Algebra over a set – Algebraic concept in measure theory, also referred to as an algebra of setsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
^When understood in the widest sense, an algebraic operation is a
function from a
Cartesian power of a set into that set, expressed formally as . Addition of real numbers is an example of an algebraic operation: it takes two numbers as input and produces one number as output. It has the form .[3]
^The exact meaning of the term al-jabr in al-Khwarizmi's work is disputed. In some passages, it expresses that a quantity diminished by subtraction is restored to its original value, similar to how a bonesetter restores broken bones by bringing them into proper alignment.[17]
^These changes were in part triggered by discoveries that solved many of the older problems of algebra. For example, the proof of the
fundamental theorem of algebra demonstrated the existence of complex solutions of polynomials[19] and the introduction of
Galois theory characterized the polynomials that have
general solutions.[20]
^Constants represent fixed numbers that do not change during the study of a specific problem.[24]
^For example, the equations and contradict each other since no values of and exist that solve both equations at the same time.[47]
^Whether a consistent system of equations has a unique solution depends on the number of variables and
independent equations. Several equations are independent of each other if they do not provide the same information and cannot be derived from each other. A unique solution exists if the number of variables is the same as the number of independent equations.
Underdetermined systems, by contrast, have more variables than independent equations and have an infinite number of solutions if they are consistent.[48]
^A set is an unordered collection of distinct elements, such as numbers, vectors, or other sets.
Set theory describes the laws and properties of sets.[57]
^According to some definitions, algebraic structures include a distinguished element as an additional component, such as the identity element in the case of multiplication.[58]
^Some of the algebraic structures studied by abstract algebra include
unary operations in addition to binary operations. For example,
normed vector spaces have a
norm, which is a unary operation often used to associate a vector with its length.[59]
^The symbols and are used in this article to represent any operation that may or may not resemble arithmetic operations.[63]
^Some authors do not require the existence of multiplicative identity elements. A ring without multiplicative identity is sometimes called a
rng.[70]
^According to some definitions, it is also possible for a subalgebra to have fewer operations.[83]
^This means that all the elements of the first set are also elements of the second set but the second set may contain elements not found in the first set.[84]
^A slightly different approach understands universal algebra as the study of one type of algebraic structures known as universal algebras. Universal algebras are defined in a general manner to include most other algebraic structures. For example, groups and rings are special types of universal algebras.[86]
^Not every type of algebraic structure forms a variety. For example, both groups and rings form varieties but fields do not.[89]
^Besides identities, universal algebra is also interested in structural features associated with
quasi-identities. A quasi-identity is an identity that only needs to be present under certain conditions (which take the form of a
Horn clause[90]). It is a generalization of identity in the sense that every identity is a quasi-identity but not every quasi-identity is an identity. A
quasivariety is a class of all algebraic structures that satisfy certain quasi-identities.[91]
^The exact date is disputed and some historians suggest a later date around 1550 BCE.[94]
^Some historians consider him the "father of algebra" while others reserve this title for Diophantus.[102]
^Algebraic varieties studied in geometry differ from the more general varieties studied in universal algebra.[123]
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