Answer:
If it's -20 degrees outside and it decreases 3 degrees what
temperature is it? I know the answer is -23 degrees but it seems like
it should be -17 degrees. When do you have to change the sign into
addition?
Date: 01/08/2004 at 12:13:38
From: Doctor Peterson
Subject: Re: word problems with negative integers
Hi, Jonah.
It may help to look at an actual thermometer. It will look something
like this:
|
+ 40
|
+ 30
|
+ 20
|
+ 10
| ^
+ 0 / \
| |
+ -10 | warmer (increasing temperature)
| |
+ -20 ----+
| |
+ -30 | colder (decreasing temperature)
| |
+ -40 \ /
| V
Suppose it was -20 degrees an hour ago, and now it has gone down 10
degrees. As it goes down, it will get farther away from 0 (since it
is below zero to start with), so it will decrease from -20 degrees
to -30 degrees! The number part (the 30, which is the "absolute
value" of the temperature) increases because we are going away from
zero while the temperature itself decreases (getting colder). If the
temperature changed to -10, it would be warmer, not colder; that would
be an increase in temperature.
Does that make sense?
- Doctor Peterson, The Math Forum
http://mathforum.org/dr.math/
Date: 01/08/2004 at 12:09:15
From: Doctor Rick
Subject: Re: word problems with negative integers
Hi, Jonah.
It's easier to understand the correct answer if you look at a
thermometer. If it had every degree labeled, portions of it would
look like this:
5 | |
4 | |
3 | |
2 | |
1 | |
0 | |
-1 | |
-2 | |
-3 | |
-4 | |
-5 | |
-6 | |
.........
-18 | |
-19 | |
-20 |-| *
-21 | | | down 3
-22 | | V
-23 | | *
-24 | |
-25 | |
If you're at -20 and you go DOWN (decrease) 3 degrees, you get to -23.
Now, to do it mathematically instead of looking at the thermometer,
we do this:
-20 - 3
which is the same as
-20 + (-3)
Subtracting is always the same as adding the opposite. Now, if you're
familiar with the distributive property, we can remember that the
negative sign means to multiply by -1, and we can do that
multiplication just once:
(-1*20) + (-1*3) = -1*(20 + 3)
= -1*23
= -23
In other words, the rule for adding two negative numbers is to add
the numbers without the negative signs, then make the result negative.
If we wanted to INCREASE the temperature 3 degrees, we would do this:
-20 + 3
I can again factor out a -1 like this:
(-1*20) + (-1*-3)
because 3 divided by -1 is -3. Then combine the -1's with the
distributive property:
-1(20 + -3) = -1(20 - 3)
= -1*17
= -17
A rule to remember here is that if you are adding two numbers with
DIFFERENT signs, you subtract the smaller from the bigger (ignoring
the negative sign), and give the answer the sign of the bigger
number. In this problem, -20 + 3, we look at 20 and 3, subtract 3
from 20 to get 17, then since the bigger number (20) has the negative
sign, we make the answer negative: -17.
I hope this helps you!
- Doctor Rick, The Math Forum
http://mathforum.org/dr.math/
Associated Topics:
Elementary Temperature
Middle School Negative Numbers
Middle School Temperature
Search the Dr. Math Library:
Find items containing (put spaces between keywords):
Click only once for faster results:
[ Choose "whole words" when searching for a word like age.]
all keywords, in any order at least one, that exact phrase
parts of words whole words
Submit your own question to Dr. Math
[Privacy Policy] [Terms of Use]
_____________________________________
Math Forum Home || Math Library || Quick Reference || Math Forum Search
_____________________________________
Ask Dr. MathTM
© 1994-2019 The Math Forum at NCTM. All rights reserved.
http://mathforum.org/dr.math/
Step-by-step explanation: