Common logarithm
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In mathematics, the common logarithm is the logarithm with base 10. It is also known as the decadic logarithm, named after its base. It is indicated by log10(x), or sometimes Log(x) with a capital L (however, this notation is ambiguous since it can also mean the complex natural logarithmic multi-valued function). On calculators it is usually "log", but mathematicians usually mean natural logarithm rather than common logarithm when they write "log".
Before the early 1970s, hand-held electronic calculators were not yet in widespread use. Because of their utility in saving work in laborious calculations by hand on paper, tables of base-10 logarithms were found in appendices of many books. Such a table of "common logarithms" giving the logarithm of each number in the left-hand column, which ran from 1 to 10 by small increments, perhaps 0.01 or 0.001. There was no need to include numbers not between 1 and 10, since if one wanted the logarithm of, for example, 120, one would know that
- [\log_120=\log_(10^2\times 1.2)=2+\log_1.2\cong2+0.079181.]
Similarly, for numbers less than 1 we have
- [\log_0.12=\log_(10^\times 1.2)=-1+\log_1.2\cong-1+0.079181=\bar.079181.]
In addition, slide rules work by using a logarithmic scale.
History
See also history of logarithmsCommon logarithms are sometimes also called Briggsian logarithms after Henry Briggs, a 17th-century British mathematician.
Because base-10 logarithms were most useful for computations, engineers generally wrote "log(x)" when they meant log10(x). Mathematicians, on the other hand, wrote "log(x)" when they mean loge(x) for the natural logarithm. Today, both notations are found. Since hand-held electronic calculators are designed by engineers rather than mathematicians, it became customary that they follow engineers' notation. So ironically, that notation, according to which one writes "ln(x)" when the natural logarithm is intended, may have been further popularized by the very invention that made the use of "common logarithms" far less common, electronic calculators.
Numeric value
The numerical value for logarithm to the base 10 can be calculated with the following identity.
- [ \log_(x) = \frac \qquad \mbox \qquad \log_(x) = \frac]
- Natural logarithm#Numerical value
- Binary logarithm#Numerical value
An approximation for simpler calculators
Early electronic calculators did not have the ability to calculate logarithms, but many could extract square roots. There is a curious approximation to the common logarithm that can be made on such a calculator. If a number has its square root taken 11 times, is subtracted from by 1, then multiplied by 889, then this is an approximation of the common logarithm of that number, of which accuracy varies. For a wide range of numbers from 10−17 to 10+18, this is accurate to within 1%. In other words:
- [889\times(x^ - 1) \approx \log_x.]
See also
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