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Zero

Zero is a number that represents the absence of quantity and serves as the additive identity in arithmetic, meaning that adding zero to a number leaves it unchanged. In numeral systems, zero also functions as a placeholder that allows place-value notation to distinguish values like 10 from 1.

The idea of nothingness appears in many cultures, but zero as a number with its own value

In mathematics, zero has several key properties: it is the additive identity (a + 0 = a), multiplication

Beyond arithmetic, zero appears in other disciplines. In set theory, the empty set has cardinality zero. In

originated
in
ancient
India.
Indian
mathematicians,
notably
Brahmagupta
in
the
7th
century,
developed
rules
for
arithmetic
that
included
operations
involving
zero.
The
concept
spread
to
the
Islamic
world
and
was
later
introduced
to
Europe
through
the
Hindu–Arabic
numeral
system,
gaining
widespread
use
after
translations
and
continued
adoption
in
the
Middle
Ages
and
Renaissance.
by
zero
yields
zero
(a
×
0
=
0),
and
zero
divided
by
a
nonzero
number
is
zero
(0
÷
a
=
0).
Division
by
zero
is
undefined,
and
exponent
rules
involve
zero
in
nuanced
ways
(for
example,
0^n
=
0
for
positive
n).
The
value
0^0
is
considered
indeterminate
in
many
contexts,
though
some
areas
define
it
for
convenience.
geometry
and
physics,
zero
often
marks
an
origin
or
reference
point,
such
as
the
coordinate
system’s
origin.
In
computing,
zero
is
a
fundamental
binary
digit,
representing
the
false
value
in
many
logical
systems
and
data
encoding
schemes.
Zero
thus
plays
a
central
role
as
both
a
concept
and
a
numerical
symbol
across
mathematics
and
science.