Logarithm

Revision as of 09:58, 22 June 2006 by Chess64 (talk | contribs)

Introduction

Logarithms and exponents are very closely related. In fact, they are inverse functions. Basically, this means that logarithms can be used to reverse the result of exponentiation and vice versa just as addition can be used to reverse the result of subtraction. Thus, if we have $a^x = b$, then taking the logarithm with base $a$ on both sides will give us $\displaystyle x=\log_a{b}$.

We would read this as "the logarithm of b, base a, is x". For example, we know that $3^3=27$. To express this in Logarithmic notation, we would write it as $\log_3 27=3$.

When a logarithm has no base, it is assumed to be base 10. Thus, $\log(100)$ means $\log_{10}(100)=2$.

Logarithmic Properties

We can use the properties of exponents to build a set of properties for logarithms.

We know that $a^x\cdot a^y=a^{x+y}$. We let $a^x=b$ and $a^y=c$. This also makes $\displaystyle a^{x+y}=bc$. From $a^x = b$ we have $x = \log_a{b}$ and from $a^y=c$ we have $y=\log_a{c}$. So $x+y = \log_a{b}+\log_a{c}$. But we also have from $\displaystyle a^{x+y} = bc$ that $x+y = \log_a{bc}$ Thus, we have found two expressions for $x+y$ establishing the identity:

$\log_a{b} + \log_a{c} = \log_a{bc}.$

Using the laws of exponents, we can derive and prove the following identities:

  • $\log_a b^n=n\log_a b$
  • $\log_a b+ \log_a c=\log_a bc$
  • $\log_a b-\log_a c=\log_a \frac{b}{c}$
  • $(\log_a b)(\log_c d)= (\log_a d)(\log_c b)$
  • $\frac{\log_a b}{\log_a c}=\log_c b$
  • $\displaystyle \log_{a^n} b^n=\log_a b$

Try proving all of these as excercises.

Problems

  1. Evaluate $(\log_{50}{2.5})(\log_{2.5}e)(\ln{2500}).$
  2. Simplify $\displaystyle \frac 1{\log_2 N}+\frac 1{\log_3 N}+\frac 1{\log_4 N}+\cdots+ \frac 1{\log_{100}}{N}$ where $N=(100!)^3$.