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logarithm

[ UK /lˈɒɡəɹˌɪθəm/ ]
[ US /ˈɫɑɡɝˌɪðəm/ ]
NOUN
  1. the exponent required to produce a given number

How To Use logarithm In A Sentence

  • During these conferences the alteration proposed by Briggs was agreed upon; and on his return from his second visit to Edinburgh in 1617 he accordingly published the first chiliad of his logarithms. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 "Brescia" to "Bulgaria"
  • All reading times were converted to words read per minute, then transformed to base 10 logarithms for the analyses because they were positively skewed.
  • The recent calculations reviewed in the article go beyond the valence approximation and attempt to improve the approach to continuum by a logarithmic factor relative to previous simulations.
  • It supports trigonometric functions, logarithm and antilogarithm.
  • By analyzing 134 informative microsatellite markers dispersed throughout the genome on 39 meioses, we localized the king mutation to the distal region of Chromosome 5 with a peak logarithm of odds PLoS Biology: New Articles
  • The logarithmic scale of the fresh mass and the linear scale of the dry mass together show how the initially exponential growth changes gradually into linear.
  • Other examples are negative numbers, complex numbers, trigonometry, raising to powers, logarithms, and the beginnings of calculus.
  • The fitted result proves that the hypothesis that load-life curve in single logarithm should be exponential curve is right.
  • It has altered the position of the siphuncle, has placed it in the centre instead of leaving it on the back, but it still whirls its spiral logarithmically as did the Ammonites in the earliest ages of the world's existence. The Life of the Spider
  • Different numbers of PCR cycles were performed to determine the logarithmic phase of the reaction.
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