exponentials and logs

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Exponentials and Logs Modules 12, 13, 14, 15 October 23, 2012

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Exponentials and Logs. Modules 12, 13, 14, 15 October 23, 2012. Inverse Functions. Logs and exponentials are inverses of each other and can be rewritten in this way: We can use the opposite function to isolate our variable when we solve equations. ๏ƒŸ๏ƒ  . What is an exponential function?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Exponentials and Logs

Exponentials and LogsModules 12, 13, 14, 15

October 23, 2012

Page 2: Exponentials and Logs

Logs and exponentials are inverses of each other and can be rewritten in this way:

We can use the opposite function to isolate our variable when we solve equations.

Inverse Functions

Page 3: Exponentials and Logs

Exponential functions are of the form:

Our variable here is still x. Ex.

What is an exponential function?

where a > 0 and a โ‰  1.

Page 4: Exponentials and Logs

Log functions are of the form:

โ€œWhat power do I raise the base a to in order to get the argument x?โ€

Ex.

What is a log function?

where a > 0 and a โ‰  1.

Page 5: Exponentials and Logs

Exponential and log functions can also have transformations just like the functions did from the first exam material.

Ex.

Transformations

Page 6: Exponentials and Logs

Is this a valid exponential function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=(โˆ’3)๐‘ฅ

Page 7: Exponentials and Logs

No, because here the base value would have to be a = -3, and we know that a has to be positive.

Is this a valid exponential function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=(โˆ’3)๐‘ฅ

Page 8: Exponentials and Logs

Is this a valid exponential function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=โˆ’3๐‘ฅ

Page 9: Exponentials and Logs

Yes, because our base is a=3, which is valid. The negative out front is a reflection over the x-axis because itโ€™s not being raised to the x power.

Is this a valid exponential function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=โˆ’3๐‘ฅ

Page 10: Exponentials and Logs

Is this a valid exponential function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=( 23 )๐‘ฅ

Page 11: Exponentials and Logs

Yes, because our base is a=2/3, which is valid because fractions are okay.

Is this a valid exponential function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=( 23 )๐‘ฅ

Page 12: Exponentials and Logs

Is this a valid log function?๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘™๐‘œ๐‘”๐œ‹ (2๐‘ฅ )

Page 13: Exponentials and Logs

Yes, because our base is a=ฯ€, which is valid because it is a value positive and not equal to 1. The 2 in front of the x is a horizontal transformation, which causes the graph to compress horizontally by ยฝ.

Is this a valid log function?๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘™๐‘œ๐‘”๐œ‹ (2๐‘ฅ )

Page 14: Exponentials and Logs

Is this a valid log function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘™๐‘œ๐‘”7(๐‘ฅ4)

Page 15: Exponentials and Logs

Yes, because our base is a=7, which is valid because it is a value positive and not equal to 1. The 4 can come out front by log rules, and so it will end up vertically stretching by 4.

Is this a valid log function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘™๐‘œ๐‘”7(๐‘ฅ4)

Page 16: Exponentials and Logs

Is this a valid log function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘™๐‘œ๐‘”โˆ’2(๐‘ฅ )

Page 17: Exponentials and Logs

No, because our base is a = -2, and negative numbers arenโ€™t allowed.

Is this a valid log function?

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘™๐‘œ๐‘”โˆ’2(๐‘ฅ )

Page 18: Exponentials and Logs

Log Properties: Identity:

Inverse (I): โ—ฆ

Inverse (II):

Exponent to Constant:

Product:

Quotient:

Page 19: Exponentials and Logs

Both types of function act differently when a is between 0 and 1 than they do when a is above 1.

Think about what happens when we square a number:

gets smaller

gets bigger

So you need to memorize 4 basic graph shapes.

Graphing

Page 20: Exponentials and Logs

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘Ž๐‘ฅ ,0<๐‘Ž<1 ๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘Ž๐‘ฅ ,๐‘Ž>1

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=log๐‘Ž ๐‘ฅ ,0<๐‘Ž<1 ๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=log๐‘Ž ๐‘ฅ ,๐‘Ž>1

Page 21: Exponentials and Logs

Graphing Notes Also think about the asymptotes to help you

think about where they end up when you transform the graphs.

ANDโ€ฆ Our good old friends domain and range.

Page 22: Exponentials and Logs

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘Ž๐‘ฅ ,0<๐‘Ž<1 ๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘Ž๐‘ฅ ,๐‘Ž>1

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=log๐‘Ž ๐‘ฅ ,0<๐‘Ž<1 ๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=log๐‘Ž ๐‘ฅ ,๐‘Ž>1

Page 23: Exponentials and Logs

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘Ž๐‘ฅ ,0<๐‘Ž<1 ๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=๐‘Ž๐‘ฅ ,๐‘Ž>1

๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=log๐‘Ž ๐‘ฅ ,0<๐‘Ž<1 ๐‘“ (๐‘ฅ )=log๐‘Ž ๐‘ฅ ,๐‘Ž>1

Domain: all realsRange: (0, infinity)

Domain: all realsRange: (0, infinity)

Domain: (0, infinity)Range: all reals

Domain: (0, infinity)Range: all reals

Page 24: Exponentials and Logs

Graph a function:

โ—ฆ First we have a base of a=2, so that tells us we need to start with the graph of . Then weโ€™ll reflect it over the x axis to turn it into , before we shift the whole thing up by 3 units to get to our final answer of .

Page 25: Exponentials and Logs

Graph a function:

โ—ฆ First we have a base of a=2, so that tells us we need to start with the graph of . Then weโ€™ll reflect it over the x axis to turn it into , before we shift the whole thing up by 3 units to get to our final answer of .

New asymptote will be horizontal and at y=3 because it started at y=0 and there was a 3 unit vertical change.

Domain: all realsRange: (- infinity, 3)

Page 26: Exponentials and Logs

Remember that logs and exponentials are inverse functions and we can use them to โ€œundoโ€ each other. Sometimes we need to do this, sometimes we donโ€™t. There are usually a couple ways to solve.

For example:

Solving Equations

Page 27: Exponentials and Logs

realize that 4 = 2^2

when we have the same base, we can set the arguments equal to each other

Solving Equations

Page 28: Exponentials and Logs

Solving Equations When we have variables in the exponent, we need to take the log of both sides to โ€œget it outโ€ so we can solve for it.

Log rules

Page 29: Exponentials and Logs

Solving Equations We want to get x by itself, so we need to raise both sides to the x power (or reorganize using the definition).

Take the cube root of both sides.

Page 30: Exponentials and Logs

Sometimes we have really complicated logs which we can expand into many individual terms using log rules.

- -

Expanding Logs

Page 31: Exponentials and Logs

We also want to be able to pull many logs into a single log in other situations.

Note that we cannot combine them unless they have the same base!

+ +

Condensing Logs

Page 32: Exponentials and Logs

Sometimes weโ€™re in the situation when we need an exact value of a log using our scientific calculator, but the base is something besides e or 10.

We can rewrite any log using this formula so that itโ€™s possible to compute:

โ—ฆ Ex. = 0.7924 = 2.3219

Rewriting Bases