Enter Logarithmic Terms
Use matching bases when you want one fully condensed logarithm. Use variables like x, y, z, or numeric arguments like 12, 8, and 3.
Formula Used
The calculator uses the main logarithm properties below. These rules work when bases match, bases are positive, bases are not 1, and all arguments are positive.
- Power rule:
k log_b(M) = log_b(M^k) - Product rule:
log_b(M) + log_b(N) = log_b(MN) - Quotient rule:
log_b(M) - log_b(N) = log_b(M/N) - Numeric value:
log_b(M) = ln(M) / ln(b)
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter each logarithmic term in a separate card.
- Choose Add or Subtract for each term.
- Enter the coefficient before the logarithm.
- Enter the base, such as 10, 2, 3, or e.
- Enter a symbolic or numeric argument.
- Choose rounding and output style.
- Click the submit button.
- Review the result, graph, steps, and export options.
Example Data Table
| Expression | Condensed Form | Main Rules |
|---|---|---|
| 2log10(x) + log10(y) | log10(x²y) | Power and product |
| log2(a) - 3log2(b) | log2(a / b³) | Power and quotient |
| 4ln(m) + 2ln(n) - ln(p) | ln(m⁴n² / p) | Power, product, quotient |
| log5(8) + log5(3) | log5(24) | Product |
Condensing Logarithmic Expressions Guide
What Condensing Means
Condensing logarithmic expressions means rewriting many log terms as fewer terms. Most exercises ask for one logarithm. This process is useful in algebra. It also helps before solving exponential equations. A long expression can look hard. The rules make it smaller. Coefficients become powers. Added logs become products. Subtracted logs become quotients. The final form is easier to read.
Why Bases Matter
The product and quotient rules need the same base. For example, base ten terms can combine with other base ten terms. Natural log terms combine with natural log terms. Different bases should not be forced together without another method. This calculator groups unlike bases. That keeps the answer clear and safe.
Using Coefficients
A coefficient before a logarithm moves onto the argument as an exponent. So three times log of x becomes log of x cubed. Negative terms move to the denominator after the power rule is applied. This order keeps each step simple. It also reduces mistakes.
Checking the Result
Numeric checking is helpful when all arguments are numbers. The calculator evaluates each term by using the change of base formula. Then it compares the value with the condensed form. Small rounding differences can happen. They do not change the algebraic result.
Common Mistakes
Do not add arguments when logs are added. Multiply them instead. Do not subtract arguments when logs are subtracted. Divide them instead. Always check the domain. Logarithmic arguments must be positive. The base must be positive too. The base also cannot equal one.
FAQs
1. What does condensing logarithms mean?
It means rewriting several logarithmic terms as one simpler logarithm, when possible. The process uses power, product, and quotient rules.
2. Can different bases be combined?
Not directly with the basic product and quotient rules. This calculator groups different bases instead of forcing an incorrect single expression.
3. What happens to a coefficient before a log?
The coefficient becomes an exponent on the log argument. For example, 2log(x) becomes log(x²).
4. How are subtraction terms handled?
Subtracted logarithms move to the denominator inside the final logarithm. Their coefficients still become powers first.
5. What values are allowed for log arguments?
Every logarithmic argument must be greater than zero. Symbolic answers should also respect this positive domain condition.
6. Can I use natural logarithms?
Yes. Enter e as the base. Terms with base e will be condensed together as natural logarithm terms.
7. Why is my numeric value unavailable?
Numeric value appears only when all arguments and bases can be evaluated as valid numbers. Symbolic entries produce algebraic output instead.
8. What export options are included?
You can download the result as a CSV file or create a PDF report from the calculated expression and steps.