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Logarithm
Definition.
Three real numbers
Properties.
There are a number of basic algebraic identities involving logarithms.![]() |
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By the very first identity, any logarithm restricted to the set of positive integers is an additive function.
Notes. In essence, logarithms convert multiplication to addition, and exponentiation to multiplication. Historically, these properties of the logarithm made it a useful tool for doing numerical calculations. Before the advent of electronic calculators and computers, tables of logarithms and the logarithmic slide rule were essential computational aids.
Scientific applications
predominantly make use of
logarithms whose base is the Eulerian number
.
Such logarithms are called natural logarithms and are commonly
denoted by the symbol
, e.g.
A frequent convention, seen in elementary mathematics texts and on
calculators, is that logarithms that do not give a base explicitly are
assumed to be base
, e.g.
The invention of logarithms is commonly credited to John Napier [ Biography]

