Logarithmic Functions
Logarithmic functions are the inverse of exponential functions. They answer a very important question: “To what power must a base be raised to get a number?”
Logarithms are used to handle very large or very small numbers, making them essential in science, finance, technology, and competitive exams.
Why Logarithms Exist
Exponential growth becomes extremely large very quickly. Logarithms were invented to reverse this growth and simplify calculations.
They turn multiplication into addition and exponential relationships into linear ones.
What Is a Logarithm?
A logarithm tells us the exponent needed to obtain a given number from a base.
If by = x, then logb(x) = y
Example: 2³ = 8 ⟹ log₂(8) = 3
Logarithmic Function Form
The general form of a logarithmic function is:
f(x) = logb(x)
Here, b is the base and x must be positive.
Relationship Between Exponential and Logarithmic Functions
Exponential and logarithmic functions are inverses of each other. One undoes what the other does.
This inverse relationship is the core idea behind logarithms.
Example: y = 2x ⟺ x = log₂(y)
Common Logarithms
Some logarithmic bases are used so frequently that they have special names.
| Log Type | Base | Notation |
| Common Log | 10 | log(x) |
| Natural Log | e ≈ 2.718 | ln(x) |
Understanding Natural Logarithms (ln)
Natural logarithms use base e, which appears naturally in growth and decay processes.
They are widely used in calculus, physics, economics, and machine learning.
Domain and Range of Logarithmic Functions
Logarithmic functions have strict domain rules. They cannot accept zero or negative inputs.
- Domain: x > 0
- Range: All real numbers
Graph of a Logarithmic Function
Logarithmic graphs increase slowly and have a vertical asymptote at x = 0.
They grow quickly at first and then slow down.
Basic Logarithm Rules
Logarithm rules simplify calculations and are heavily tested in exams.
- log(ab) = log a + log b
- log(a/b) = log a − log b
- log(an) = n log a
Evaluating Logarithms
To evaluate a logarithm, ask yourself what power gives the number.
Examples:
- log₁₀(100) = 2
- log₂(32) = 5
- ln(e²) = 2
Solving Simple Logarithmic Equations
Logarithmic equations are solved by converting them into exponential form.
Example: log₂(x) = 4
Convert → x = 2⁴ = 16
Logarithmic Functions in Real Life
Logarithms are used when numbers grow very large or change multiplicatively.
- Earthquake magnitude (Richter scale)
- Sound intensity (decibels)
- pH scale in chemistry
- Population studies
Logarithmic Functions in Finance
Finance uses logarithms to measure growth rates and returns over time.
Log returns are common in stock market analysis.
Logarithmic Functions in Technology & IT
Logarithms play a critical role in computing.
- Algorithm time complexity (log n)
- Data compression
- Machine learning loss scaling
- Search algorithms
Logarithmic Functions in Competitive Exams
Exams test:
- Basic log values
- Logarithmic identities
- Converting between log and exponential forms
Conceptual clarity is more important than memorization.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Logarithmic mistakes usually come from ignoring definitions.
- Taking log of zero or negative numbers
- Confusing base with result
- Misusing log rules
Practice Questions
Q1. Evaluate: log₁₀(1000)
Q2. Solve: log₂(x) = 5
Q3. What is the domain of f(x) = log(x − 3)?
Quick Quiz
Q1. What does log₁₀(1) equal?
Q2. Logarithms undo which type of functions?
Quick Recap
- Logarithms are inverse of exponentials
- They answer “what power?”
- Domain is always positive values
- Used to manage large-scale growth
- Essential in science, finance, and technology