The logarithm is the mathematical operation that is the inverse of exponentiation (raising a constant, the base, to a power). The logarithm of a number x in base b is the number n such that x = bn. It is usually written as
For example,
If n is a positive integer, bn means the product of n factors equal to b.
However, at least if b is positive, the definition can be extended to any real number n (see exponentiation for details). Similarly, the logarithm function can be defined for any positive real number. For each positive base, b, other than 1, there is one logarithm function and one exponential function; they are inverse functions. See the figure on the right.
Logarithms can reduce multiplication operations to addition, division to subtraction, exponentiation to multiplication, and roots to division. Therefore, logarithms are useful for making lengthy numerical operations easier to perform and, before the advent of electronic computers, they were widely used for this purpose in fields such as astronomy, engineering, navigation, and cartography. They have important mathematical properties and are still used in many ways.
As recently as 1984, Paul Halmos in his autobiography heaped contempt on what he considered the childish "ln" notation, which he said no mathematician had ever used. (The notation was in fact invented in 1893 by Irving Stringham, professor of mathematics at Berkeley.) As of 2005, some mathematicians have adopted the "ln" notation, but most use "log".
In computer science, the base 2 logarithm is sometimes written as lg(x) to avoid confusion. This usage was suggested by Edward Reingold and popularized by Donald Knuth. However, in Russian literature, the notation lg(x) is generally used for the base 10 logarithm, so even this usage is not without its perils."Common Logarithm" at MathWorld.
Moreover, this result implies that all logarithm functions (whatever the base) are similar to each other.
So to calculate the log with base 2 of the number 16 with your calculator:
The antilogarithm function is another name for the inverse of the logarithmic function. It is written antilogb(n) and means the same as bn.
| Operation with numbers | Operation with exponents | Logarithmic identity |
|---|---|---|
and by applying the chain rule, the derivative for other bases is:
The antiderivative of the logarithm is
See also: Table of common limits#Logarithmic and exponential functions, list of integrals of logarithmic functions.
The discrete logarithm is a related notion in the theory of finite groups. It involves solving the equation bn = x, where b and x are elements of the group, and n is an integer specifying a power in the group operation. For some finite groups, it is believed that the discrete logarithm is very hard to calculate, whereas discrete exponentials are quite easy. This asymmetry has applications in public key cryptography.
The logarithm of a matrix is the inverse of the matrix exponential.
A double logarithm is the inverse function of the double-exponential function. A super-logarithm or hyper-logarithm is the inverse function of the super-exponential function. The super-logarithm of x grows even more slowly than the double logarithm for large x.
For each positive b not equal to 1, the function logb (x) is an isomorphism from the group of positive real numbers under multiplication to the group of (all) real numbers under addition. They are the only such isomorphisms. The logarithm function can be extended to a Haar measure in the topological group of positive real numbers under multiplication.
In the 17th century, Joost Bürgi, a Swiss clockmaker in the employ of the Duke of Hesse-Kassel, first discovered logarithms as a computational tool; however he did not publish his discovery until 1620. The method of logarithms was first publicly propounded in 1614, in a book entitled Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Descriptio, by John Napier, Baron of Merchiston in Scotland, four years after the publication of his memorable discovery. This method contributed to the advance of science, and especially of astronomy, by making some difficult calculations possible. Prior to the advent of calculators and computers, it was used constantly in surveying, navigation, and other branches of practical mathematics. It supplanted the more involved prosthaphaeresis, which relied on trigonometric identities, as a quick method of computing products. Besides their usefulness in computation, logarithms also fill an important place in the higher theoretical mathematics.
At first, Napier called logarithms "artificial numbers" and antilogarithms "natural numbers". Later, Napier formed the word logarithm, a portmanteau, to mean a number that indicates a ratio: λόγος (logos) meaning proportion, and αριθμoς (arithmos) meaning number. Napier chose that because the difference of two logarithms determines the ratio of the numbers for which they stand, so that an arithmetic series of logarithms corresponds to a geometric series of numbers. The term antilogarithm was introduced in the late 17th century and, while never used extensively in mathematics, persisted in collections of tables until they fell into disuse.
Napier did not use a base as we now understand it, but his logarithms were, up to a scaling factor, effectively to base . For interpolation purposes and ease of calculation, it is useful to make the ratio in the geometric series close to 1. Napier chose , and Bürgi chose . Napier's original logarithms did not have log 1 = 0 but rather log = 0. Thus if is a number and is its logarithm as calculated by Napier, . Since is approximately , this makes approximately equal to . *
By the 13th century, the first logarithmic tables were produced by Muslim mathematicians. In 1617, Henry Briggs published the first installment of his own table of common logarithms, containing the logarithms of all integers below 1000 to eight decimal places. This he followed, in 1624, by his Arithmetica Logarithmica, containing the logarithms of all integers from 1 to 20,000 and from 90,000 to 100,000 to fourteen places of decimals, together with a learned introduction, in which the theory and use of logarithms are fully developed. The interval from 20,000 to 90,000 was filled up by Adriaan Vlacq, a Dutch computer; but in his table, which appeared in 1628, the logarithms were given to only ten places of decimals.
Vlacq's table was later to found to contain 603 errors, but "this cannot be regarded as a great number, when it is considered that the table was the result of an original calculation, and that more than 2,100,000 printed figures are liable to error." (Athenaeum, 15 June 1872. See also the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society for May 1872.) An edition of Vlacq's work, containing many corrections, was issued at Leipzig in 1794 under the title Thesaurus Logarithmorum Completus by Jurij Vega.
Callet's seven-place table (Paris, 1795), instead of stopping at 100,000, gave the eight-place logarithms of the numbers between 100,000 and 108,000, in order to diminish the errors of interpolation, which were greatest in the early part of the table; and this addition was generally included in seven-place tables. The only important published extension of Vlacq's table was made by Mr. Sang 1871, whose table contained the seven-place logarithms of all numbers below 200,000.
Briggs and Vlacq also published original tables of the logarithms of the trigonometric functions.
Besides the tables mentioned above, a great collection, called Tables du Cadastre, was constructed under the direction of Gaspard de Prony, by an original computation, under the auspices of the French republican government of the 1700s. This work, which contained the logarithms of all numbers up to 100,000 to nineteen places, and of the numbers between 100,000 and 200,000 to twenty-four places, exists only in manuscript, "in seventeen enormous folios," at the Observatory of Paris. It was begun in 1792; and "the whole of the calculations, which to secure greater accuracy were performed in duplicate, and the two manuscripts subsequently collated with care, were completed in the short space of two years." (English Cyclopaedia, Biography, Vol. IV., article "Prony.") Cubic interpolation could be used to find the logarithm of any number to a similar accuracy.
To the modern student who has the benefit of a calculator, the work put into the tables just mentioned is a small indication of the importance of logarithms.
Another interesting coincidence is that log10(2) ≈ 0.3 (the actual value is about 0.301029996); this corresponds to the fact that, with an error of only 2.4%, 210 ≈ 103 (i.e. 1024 is about 1000; see also binary prefix).
Logarithms | Elementary special functions | Binary operations | Portmanteaus
Логаритъм | Logaritme | Logaritmus | Logaritme | Logarithmus | Logaritmo | Logaritmo | لگاریتم | Logarithme | Función logaritmo | 로그 | Logaritmo | Logaritma | Logaritmo | לוגריתם | Logarithmus | Logaritms | Logaritmus | Logaritme | 対数 | Logaritme | Logarytm | Logaritmo | Logaritm | Логарифм | Logaritmus | Logaritem | Логаритам | Logaritmi | Logaritm | Logaritma | 对数
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