Introduction To Logarithms
Introduction To Logarithms
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Introduction to Logarithms
In its simplest form, a logarithm answers the question:
Introduction
Introduction to
to Logarithms
Logarithms
How many of one number do we multiply to get another number?
So the logarithm is 3
How to Write it
log2(8) = 3
2x2x2 =8 log (8 ) = 3
2
3
base
More Examples
Answer: log5(625) =4
Answer: log2(64) =6
Exponents
Exponents and Logarithms are related, let's find out how ...
exponent
The exponent says how many times to use the number in a multiplication.
3
2 In this example: 23 = 2 × 2 × 2 = 8
In this way:
exponent
23 = 8 log2( 8) = 3
base
So the logarithm answers the question:
102 = 100
log10(100) = 2
34 = 81
log3(81) = 4
log(100)
It is how many times we need to use 10 in a multiplication, to get our desired number.
It is how many times we need to use "e" in a multiplication, to get our desired number.
Engineer Mathematician
Example
Thinks Thinks
log(50) log10(50) loge(50) confusion
So, be careful when you read "log" that you know what base they mean!
Negative Logarithms
Well, 1 ÷ 8 = 0.125,
So log8(0.125) = −1
Or many divides:
So log5(0.008) = −3
.. etc..
1000 1 × 10 × 10 × 10 log10(1000) =3
100 1 × 10 × 10 log10(100) =2
10 1 × 10 log10(10) =1
1 1 log10(1) =0
0.1 1 ÷ 10 log10(0.1) = −1
0.01 1 ÷ 10 ÷ 10 log10(0.01) = −2
0.001 1 ÷ 10 ÷ 10 ÷ 10 log10(0.001) = −3
.. etc..
Looking at that table, see how positive, zero or negative logarithms are really part of the same (fairly
simple) pattern.
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