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I invest $300 in a bank that pays 5% interest, compounded annually. So after years, I have dollars in the bank. When I come back, I find that my account is worth $1000. How many years has it been? Your answer will not be a number—it will be a formula with a log in it.
The pH of a substance is given by the formula , if the concentration of Hydrogen ions.
You may have noticed that all our logarithmic functions use the base 10. Because this is so common, it is given a special name: the common log . When you see something like with no base written at all, that means the log is 10. (So is a shorthand way of writing , just like is a shorthand way of writing . With roots, if you don’t see a little number there, you assume a 2. With logs, you assume a 10.)
In the space below, write the question that asks.
OK, so the
log
button on your calculator does common logs, that is, logs base 10.
There is one other log button on your calculator. It is called the "natural log," and it is written
ln
(which sort of stands for "natural log" only backward— personally, I blame the French).
ln
means the log to the base
e
. What is
e
? It's a long ugly number—kind of like π only different—it goes on forever and you can only approximate it, but it is somewhere around 2.7. Answer the following question about the natural log.
(*this is the only one that requires the
ln
button on your calculator)
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