Logarithms
Logarithms
3. log 𝑎𝑚 = 𝑚 log 𝑎 Also note that log = log x1/y = (1/y )log x
4. log 𝑏 𝑎 log 𝑐 𝑏 = log 𝑐 𝑎
log𝑐 𝑎 log10 8
5. log 𝑏 𝑎 = E.g., log 2 8 =
log𝑐 𝑏 log10 2
1
6. log 𝑏 𝑎 = log𝑎 𝑏
by applying law 5 when c = a
Weak Bases
Bases < 1 are weak bases; Log value for weak bases decreases with the numbers;
For 𝑎 > 1, 𝑝 > 𝑞, log 𝑎 𝑝 < log 𝑎 𝑞
If 𝑥 > 1, 𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑛 log 𝑎 𝑥 is negative; If 0 > 𝑥 > 1, 𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑛 log 𝑎 𝑥 is positive;
log10 3
For example log 0.5 3 = is positive as log 5 > log 10
log10 5 − log10 10
Finding Logs from Log Table
Consider 2, 20, 200, 2000, 0.2, 0.02
2=2 log 2 = 0.3010 Standard Form
20 = 101 × 2 log 20 = 1 + log 2 = 1.3010 𝑎𝑠 log10 10 = 1
200 = 102 × 2 log 200 = 2 + log 2 = 2.3010 𝑎𝑠 log10 102 = 2
2000 = 103 × 2 log 2000 = 3 + log 2 = 3.3010 𝑎𝑠 log10 103 = 3
0.2 = 10−1 × 2 log 0.2 = −1 + log 2 = 1̅. 3010 = −0.6090
0.02 = 10−2 × 2 log 0.2 = −2 + log 2 = 2̅. 3010 = −1.6090
In standard form, the integral part (which can be positive or negative) is called Characteristics and
the fractional part (always kept positive) is called mantissa. Using standard form – where the
fraction is always positive – is convenient (for finding antilogs).
The characteristic of the logarithm of a number whose integral part consists of n digits is n - 1
Antilogarithm or Antilog
An antilog is the inverse of the log function. (log 1000 = 3; Antilog 3 = 1000)
log 250 = 2.3979, Antilog 2.3979 = 250; Note that 102.3979 = 250 ; (base 10 is common)
Antilog of b to base m = 𝑚𝑏 ; E.g., 23 = 8, log 2 8 = 3, Antilog of 3 to base 2 = 8;