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logantilog

Logantilog is a term used in electronics to describe a class of circuits or devices that implement logarithmic and antilogarithmic transfer characteristics. In practice, a logantilog circuit may provide a logarithmic response for one portion of its input range and an exponential (antilogarithmic) response for another, or may be designed to realize both operations in a configurable manner.

Implementation commonly relies on the exponential current–voltage relationships of diodes or transistors, often within an operational

Applications include automatic gain control, sensor signal conditioning, analog computation, and measurement systems that require wide

Historically, the concept appears in mid-20th-century analog computing and early integrated circuits as log and antilog

See also: logarithmic amplifier, exponential amplifier, antilogarithm, log-domain processing.

amplifier
feedback
network.
By
selecting
component
values
and
reference
temperatures,
the
circuit
can
approximate
y
=
log_b(x)
or
y
=
b^x,
with
base
b
chosen
for
the
application
(for
example
base
10
or
base
e).
Temperature
effects
and
calibration
are
important
due
to
the
sensitivity
of
exponential
devices.
dynamic
range
or
linearization
of
nonlinear
sensors.
In
audio
and
instrumentation,
logantilog
devices
can
convert
between
linear
and
logarithmic
domains,
enabling
logarithmic
sound
level
meters
or
exponential
control
signals.
amplifiers;
the
exact
terminology
logantilog
is
not
universally
standardized
and
may
be
used
variably
by
manufacturers
to
denote
a
device
performing
both
transfer
functions
or
a
pair
of
interacting
log
and
antilog
stages.