first of all the default base of a log is always 10. usually an example of a log would look like this, log100=x. this would turn out to look more like this, 100=10^x. now the answer is x=2 because 10 squared is equal to 100. this is pretty much what i get from logs. also if the base and the little number right after the word log are the same then they cancel out.
questions:
- are ln and log the same things?
no, natural log has a base of e and logs can have a base of any number
ReplyDeleteNo
ReplyDeleteNatural Log (ln) is also equal to log base e
and log is just log.
ln has the base of e and the log can have any base
ReplyDeleteno!.. haha
ReplyDeleteln can be re-written as loge (e is the base)
log can have any base (ex. log2, log50, log100)
Lets say y = ln(x); z=log t
ReplyDeleteln is log base e AND log is log base 10.
THIS IS WHAT THEY BECOME:
e^y = x; 10^z = t
SO THE BOTH GIVE YOU A DIFFERENT OUTPUT
Nope they are not.
ReplyDeletetheyre to completly different things.
Natural Logs or ln has a base of e.
Logs can have any number or variable as a base.