M1.05: Finding Logarithms
Logarithms are useful when the measurements in a dataset have a wide range of values, all greater than zero. Positive values are needed because only positive numbers have logarithms, since no exponent of 10 exists that gives a negative or zero result. Use of a negative value in the LOG10 spreadsheet function, or with the LOG key on a calculator, will give an error message. The logarithm values themselves can be zero, in which case the original value is exactly 1, or negative, in which case the original value is less than 1 (e.g., -2 is the logarithm of 0.01 = 10-2).Answer: [a] The logarithm of 582 is positive and is not an integer. [b] The logarithm of 10,000 is positive and is an integer. [c] The logarithm of 0.23 is negative and is not an integer. [d] This number -48 is not positive, and therefore it does not have a logarithm. [e] The logarithm of 6.2×1026 is positive and is not an integer. [f] The logarithm of 493.57285 is positive and is not an integer. [g] The logarithm of 0.001 is negative and is an integer.
Finding logarithms of values, or values from their logarithms
In spreadsheets, we compute the base-10 logarithm of a number with the LOG10 function. Thus a cell containing the formula “=LOG10(3100)” will display the result 3.491361694. Note that logarithms, like trigonometric functions, almost always give values that are non-repeating decimals, so the logarithm values used are approximate rather than exact. The exception is for whole-number powers of the base, so that the base-10 logarithm of 1,000,000 is exactly 6, and that of 0.001 is exactly –3. Since a logarithm is an exponent, you can always get back the original value by using the logarithm value as an exponent for the base. Thus 103.491 (the formula “=10^3.491” in a spreadsheet) will evaluate to nearly 3100, although there will a small difference due to rounding-error propagation because 3.491 is a rounded-off version of the logarithm. Most calculators have a LOG key that has the same effect as the LOG10 spreadsheet function. The inverse function for a calculator’s LOG key is 10x, which coverts a base-10 logarithm back to the original value.Answer: [a] 4.684 [b] 0.301 [c] –1.260 [d] 0.857 [e] 13.415 [f] –4.721
Answer: Answers: [a] 209 [b] 0.00173 [c] 4.29 [d] 3.27×10-13 [e] 23,100 [f] 8.53×1026
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- Mathematics for Modeling. Authored by: Mary Parker and Hunter Ellinger. License: CC BY: Attribution.