What is a Logarithm?
A logarithm answers the question: “What exponent do I need?”
You know that .
But what if I ask: “2 to what power gives 8?”
The answer is 3. A logarithm is how we write that question:
The logarithm finds the exponent.
Converting Between Forms
These say the same thing:
| Exponential form | Logarithm form |
|---|---|
How to Read It
Ask yourself: “2 to what power gives 8?”
→ → Answer: 3
More examples:
- because
- because
- because
Two Special Bases
Two bases are so common they get their own notation:
Common logarithm (base 10):
Natural logarithm (base e):
What is e?
is called Euler’s number.
It appears whenever you have continuous growth.
Where e Comes From
Imagine you put $1 in a bank with 100% interest per year.
The more frequently you compound, the more you earn.
But there’s a limit. No matter how often you compound, you never exceed .
Why e Matters
isn’t arbitrary. It emerges naturally whenever growth is proportional to size:
- Population growth
- Radioactive decay
- Compound interest
- Cooling and heating
That’s why is called the “natural” logarithm.
The Inverse Relationship
Logarithms and exponentials undo each other.
Just like , or how and cancel.
Examples: