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IB Maths AI 1.8 Notes

This page contains our IB Maths AI notes for 1.8. By reading each one of these notes, you will fully cover the content for IB Maths AI 'Advanced exponents & logs'.

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Logarithms

A logarithm is the inverse of an exponential. If ax=ba^x=b, then

logab=x\log_ab=x

This means a logarithm tells us the power that the base must be raised to in order to produce a number.

Example: 23=8    log28=32^3=8\iff\log_28=3.

A logarithm with base 1010 is called a common logarithm.

  • log1000=3\log1000=3 because 103=100010^3=1000
  • log0.001=3\log0.001=-3 because 103=0.00110^{-3}=0.001

A logarithm with base ee is called a natural logarithm and is written as ln\ln.

lnx=logex\ln x=\log_ex

The number ee is an irrational constant with value approximately 2.718282.71828.

Important facts for a>0a \gt 0, a1a\ne1, and x>0x \gt 0:

  • logaa=1\log_aa=1
  • loga1=0\log_a1=0
  • loga(ax)=x\log_a(a^x)=x
  • alogax=xa^{\log_ax}=x
  • ln(ex)=x\ln(e^x)=x
  • elnx=xe^{\ln x}=x

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