log2(31000) = 1000 log2(3)log2(3) = 1.585 (rounded)1000 log2(3) = log2(31000) = 1,584.96(rounded)
I guess you mean log2{log2[log2(x)]} = 0 ?Let Y = {log2[log2(x)]}, so you have log2[Y] = 0The solution to this is Y = 1,Then you a simpler equation: log2[log2(x)] = 1Let Z = log2(x), so log2[Z] = 1, solves to Z = 2,so log2(x) = 2, and x = 4
[log2 (x - 3)](log2 5) = 2log2 10 log2 (x - 3) = 2log2 10/log2 5 log2 (x - 3) = 2(log 10/log 2)/(log5/log 2) log2 (x - 3) = 2(log 10/log 5) log2 (x - 3) = 2(1/log 5) log2 (x - 3) = 2/log 5 x - 3 = 22/log x = 3 + 22/log 5
Find 102a if log2=a and log3=b B has no purpose in this question If a=log2, then 102a =102(log2)
Paul Dirac, the great physicist, solved this for all integers:n = - log2 [ log2 (2√(√ … √2))] where log2 represents log to the base 2 the 2 after the round open bracket, "(", represents square root (as opposed to cube or other root, and the ellipsis is taking square roots n times.
log2(31000) = 1000 log2(3)log2(3) = 1.585 (rounded)1000 log2(3) = log2(31000) = 1,584.96(rounded)
log1 + log2 + log3 = log(1*2*3) = log6
I guess you mean log2{log2[log2(x)]} = 0 ?Let Y = {log2[log2(x)]}, so you have log2[Y] = 0The solution to this is Y = 1,Then you a simpler equation: log2[log2(x)] = 1Let Z = log2(x), so log2[Z] = 1, solves to Z = 2,so log2(x) = 2, and x = 4
There is nothing to solve because there is no = sign.
[log2 (x - 3)](log2 5) = 2log2 10 log2 (x - 3) = 2log2 10/log2 5 log2 (x - 3) = 2(log 10/log 2)/(log5/log 2) log2 (x - 3) = 2(log 10/log 5) log2 (x - 3) = 2(1/log 5) log2 (x - 3) = 2/log 5 x - 3 = 22/log x = 3 + 22/log 5
Find 102a if log2=a and log3=b B has no purpose in this question If a=log2, then 102a =102(log2)
log2 sqrt(q) = p/2 log2 8q = 3 + p And it is root, not route.
log2(6400/100) = log2(64) = 6
log2(8) = 3 means (2)3 = 8
log5 +log2 =log(5x2)=log(10)=log10(10)=1
7Because it is a logarithmic sequence:2^0 =1 so log2 1 = 02^3 = 8 so log2 8 = 32^5 = 32 so log2 32 = 52^7 = 128 so log2 128 = 7
log16