e to the power 1.25, or 10 to the power 1.25, or 2 to the power 1.25, or whatever other number is used as the base for the logarithm.
The anti-log of what ??? If log(12) = 1.07918, then antilog(1.07918) = 12 Did you want the anti-log of 12 ? That's 1,000,000,000,000.
No. The log of a quotient is the log of a denominator subtracted from the log of the numerator.
A log-log scale is a set of axes where each axis is logarithmic in scale.
to log in friendster.com
k=log4 91.8 4^k=91.8 -- b/c of log rules-- log 4^k=log 91.8 -- b/c of log rules-- k*log 4=log91.8 --> divide by log 4 k=log 91.8/log 4 k= 3.260
The anti-log of what ??? If log(12) = 1.07918, then antilog(1.07918) = 12 Did you want the anti-log of 12 ? That's 1,000,000,000,000.
What 'logarithm base are you using. If Base '10' per calculator The log(10)125 = 2.09691 However, You can use logs to any base So if we use base '5' Then log(5)125 = 3 Because 125 = 5^3
no
To find anti log of a number enter the number as the exponent of 10.
1.091315...
You Log Off
125 log(D) = 2log(D) = 2/125 = 0.016D = 100.016D = 1.037528 (rounded)
log(24.6992) = 1.392682887 Now the anti-log. 101.392682887 = 24.6992 ---------------
anti-log 36 is base36 Without any qualification "log n" is the "logarithm to any base of n"; though it is often used for common logs, or logs to base 10 (log10 n), which is often abbreviated to lg. On a calculator, the [log] button is used for common logs to base 10, so anti-log 36 = 1036
Without antilog tables or a scientific calculator you cannot. Antilog(x) is usually 10x or ex and that is not simple to calculate.
Adam-12 - 1968 Log 125 A Safe Job 3-26 was released on: USA: 15 April 1971
You have, y = 6 + log x anti log of it, 10y = (106) x