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log help! (1 Viewer)

darkphoenix

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Hey, i was doing log question and I cannot get the meaning of e^x
The question is to differentiate log10x and the answer is (log10e)/x
can some one explain why the e come out from no where. Thanks heaps
 

4025808

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Hey, i was doing log question and I cannot get the meaning of e^x
The question is to differentiate log10x and the answer is (log10e)/x
can some one explain why the e come out from no where. Thanks heaps
log10(x) = loge(x)/loge(10) ------> change of base rule

now that 1/loge(10) is a constant, we leave it unchanged. then we differentiate loge(x) which gives 1/x

1/x * 1/loge(10) = 1/[xloge(10)]

btw the answer you provided is wrong, to confirm, go here -> http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=differentiate+log+base+10+x
 

darkphoenix

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OH, ok. Thanks, actually the full question(excel)is to differentiate with respect to x: (log10x)^3

and the solution is 1/x(3log10e)(log10x)^2
 

SpiralFlex

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OH, ok. Thanks, actually the full question(excel)is to differentiate with respect to x: (log10x)^3

and the solution is 1/x(3log10e)(log10x)^2


In this case you cannot fully utilise your logarithmic laws. Or can we? Change of base. :)

First of all I will clearly use the change of base law.



Now we can finally derive!



 
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darkphoenix

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Sorry I just started to do log in this holiday, I am confused at change of base formula. log a(b)= logc(b) /logc(a) can c be any thing? or just e
 

math man

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i just saw the asnwer..to change my answer to the right answer you realise:



this simplys to:



and subbing this into my answer gives the desired result:
 

math man

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fine full solution is:

using change of base rule.

using power rule.

Edit: full worked solution to obtain 1/x(3log10e)(log10x)^2 is:

from



we realise that:



and that

by applying change of base rule for 10 now

subbing these into my first derivate becomes:




and this becomes:



which is the solution you gave us
 
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math man

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Sorry I just started to do log in this holiday, I am confused at change of base formula. log a(b)= logc(b) /logc(a) can c be any thing? or just e
and we can use the change of base for anything, but we only know how to differentiate base e so thats why we change it to e in these questions
 

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