logaritmu
Logaritmu is the mathematical concept that expresses the inverse operation of exponentiation. For a base b > 0 with b ≠ 1, the logaritmu of a positive number y with base b is the exponent x such that b^x = y. It is written log_b(y), or simply log(y) when the base is understood from context. The base determines the properties and scale of the logarithm.
Common choices are base 10 (the common logarithm), base e (the natural logarithm, written ln), and base
Key laws: log_b(xy) = log_b x + log_b y; log_b(x/y) = log_b x − log_b y; log_b(x^k) = k log_b x.
History and computation: Logarithms were developed in the early 17th century by John Napier and later extended
Applications span science, engineering, and data analysis. Logarithms linearize multiplicative relationships, compress large ranges (as in