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logarithm
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The answer LOGARITHM has 29 possible clue(s) in existing crosswords.
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Definitions of logarithm in various dictionaries:
noun - the exponent required to produce a given number
The power to which a base, usually 10, must be raised to produce a given number.
LOGARITHM - In mathematics, the logarithm is the inverse function to exponentiation. That means the logarithm of a given number x is the exponent to which anothe...
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An algorithm is a problem-solving procedure & this anagram is a number used as an exponent |
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Mathematics The power to which a base, such as 10, must be raised to produce a given number. If nx a, the logarithm of a, with n as the base, is x symbolically, logn a x. For example, 103 1,000 therefore, log10 1,000 3. The kinds most often used are the common logarithm (base 10), the natural logarithm (base e), and the binary logarithm (base 2). |
a quantity representing the power to which a fixed number (the base) must be raised to produce a given number. |
the exponent required to produce a given number |
the number that shows how many times a number, called the base, has to be multiplied by itself to produce another number. Adding or taking away logarithms can replace multiplying or dividing large numbers. |
a number which shows how many times a particular number, called the base, has to be multiplied by itself to produce another number |
Logarithm description |
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In mathematics, the logarithm is the inverse function to exponentiation. That means the logarithm of a given number x is the exponent to which another fixed number, the base b, must be raised, to produce that number x. In the simplest case the logarithm counts repeated multiplication of the same factor; e.g., since 1000 = 10×10×10 = 103, the "logarithm to base 10" of 1000 is 3. The logarithm of x to base b is denoted as logb(x) (or, without parentheses, as logbx, or even without explicit base as logx, when no confusion is possible). More generally, exponentiation allows any positive real number to be raised to any real power, always producing a positive result, so the logarithm for any two positive real numbers b and x where b is not equal to 1, is always a unique real number y. More explicitly, the defining relation between exponentiation and logarithm is:* * * * * log * * b * * * * ( * x * ) * |