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  2. Identity element - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_element

    An identity with respect to addition is called an additive identity (often denoted as 0) and an identity with respect to multiplication is called a multiplicative identity (often denoted as 1). [3] These need not be ordinary addition and multiplication—as the underlying operation could be rather arbitrary.

  3. Multiplication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiplication

    The multiplicative identity is 1; anything multiplied by 1 is itself. This feature of 1 is known as the identity property: [27] [28] =. Property of 0 Any number multiplied by 0 is 0. This is known as the zero property of multiplication: [27] = Negation −1 times any number is equal to the additive inverse of that number:

  4. List of logarithmic identities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_logarithmic_identities

    Logarithms and exponentials with the same base cancel each other. This is true because logarithms and exponentials are inverse operations—much like the same way multiplication and division are inverse operations, and addition and subtraction are inverse operations.

  5. Field (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_(mathematics)

    An equivalent, and more succinct, definition is: a field has two commutative operations, called addition and multiplication; it is a group under addition with 0 as the additive identity; the nonzero elements form a group under multiplication with 1 as the multiplicative identity; and multiplication distributes over addition.

  6. Identity (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_(mathematics)

    Visual proof of the Pythagorean identity: for any angle , the point (,) = (⁡, ⁡) lies on the unit circle, which satisfies the equation + =.Thus, ⁡ + ⁡ =. In mathematics, an identity is an equality relating one mathematical expression A to another mathematical expression B, such that A and B (which might contain some variables) produce the same value for all values of the variables ...

  7. Ring (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_(mathematics)

    Formally, a ring is a set endowed with two binary operations called addition and multiplication such that the ring is an abelian group with respect to the addition operator, and the multiplication operator is associative, is distributive over the addition operation, and has a multiplicative identity element.

  8. Multiplicative group of integers modulo n - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiplicative_group_of...

    Integer multiplication respects the congruence classes, that is, a ≡ a' and b ≡ b' (mod n) implies ab ≡ a'b' (mod n). This implies that the multiplication is associative, commutative, and that the class of 1 is the unique multiplicative identity. Finally, given a, the multiplicative inverse of a modulo n is an integer x satisfying ax ≡ ...

  9. Idempotence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence

    In a Boolean ring, multiplication is idempotent. In a Tropical semiring, addition is idempotent. In a ring of quadratic matrices, the determinant of an idempotent matrix is either 0 or 1. If the determinant is 1, the matrix necessarily is the identity matrix. [citation needed]