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The natural logarithm of a number is its logarithm to the base of the mathematical constant e, which is an irrational and transcendental number approximately equal to 2.718281828459. The natural logarithm of x is generally written as ln x, logex, or sometimes, if the base e is implicit, simply log x.Parentheses are sometimes added for clarity, giving ln(x), loge(x), or log(x). This is done particularly when the argument to the logarithm is not a single symbol, so as to prevent ambiguity.
Natural logarithm | |
---|---|
![]() Graph of part of the natural logarithm function. The function slowly grows to positive infinity as x increases, and slowly goes to negative infinity as x approaches 0 ("slowly" as compared to any power law of x). | |
General information | |
General definition | |
Motivation of invention | hyperbola quadrature |
Fields of application | Pure and applied mathematics |
Domain, codomain and image | |
Domain | |
Codomain | |
Image | |
Specific values | |
Value at +∞ | +∞ |
Value at e | 1 |
Value at 1 | 0 |
Value at 0 | -∞ |
Specific features | |
Asymptote | |
Root | 1 |
Inverse | |
Derivative | |
Antiderivative |
The natural logarithm of x is the power to which e would have to be raised to equal x. For example, ln 7.5 is 2.0149..., because e2.0149... = 7.5. The natural logarithm of e itself, ln e, is 1, because e1 = e, while the natural logarithm of 1 is 0, since e0 = 1.
The natural logarithm can be defined for any positive real number a as the area under the curve y = 1/x from 1 to a (with the area being negative when 0 < a < 1). The simplicity of this definition, which is matched in many other formulas involving the natural logarithm, leads to the term "natural". The definition of the natural logarithm can then be extended to give logarithm values for negative numbers and for all non-zero complex numbers, although this leads to a multi-valued function: see complex logarithm for more.
The natural logarithm function, if considered as a real-valued function of a positive real variable, is the inverse function of the exponential function, leading to the identities:
Like all logarithms, the natural logarithm maps multiplication of positive numbers into addition:
Logarithms can be defined for any positive base other than 1, not only e. However, logarithms in other bases differ only by a constant multiplier from the natural logarithm, and can be defined in terms of the latter, .
Logarithms are useful for solving equations in which the unknown appears as the exponent of some other quantity. For example, logarithms are used to solve for the half-life, decay constant, or unknown time in exponential decay problems. They are important in many branches of mathematics and scientific disciplines, and are used to solve problems involving compound interest.
History
The concept of the natural logarithm was worked out by Gregoire de Saint-Vincent and Alphonse Antonio de Sarasa before 1649. Their work involved quadrature of the hyperbola with equation xy = 1, by determination of the area of hyperbolic sectors. Their solution generated the requisite "hyperbolic logarithm" function, which had the properties now associated with the natural logarithm.
An early mention of the natural logarithm was by Nicholas Mercator in his work Logarithmotechnia, published in 1668, although the mathematics teacher John Speidell had already compiled a table of what in fact were effectively natural logarithms in 1619. It has been said that Speidell's logarithms were to the base e, but this is not entirely true due to complications with the values being expressed as integers.: 152
Notational conventions
The notations ln x and logex both refer unambiguously to the natural logarithm of x, and log x without an explicit base may also refer to the natural logarithm. This usage is common in mathematics, along with some scientific contexts as well as in many programming languages. In some other contexts such as chemistry, however, log x can be used to denote the common (base 10) logarithm. It may also refer to the binary (base 2) logarithm in the context of computer science, particularly in the context of time complexity.
Generally, the notation for the logarithm to base b of a number x is shown as logbx. So the log of 8 to the base 2 would be log2 8 = 3.
Definitions
The natural logarithm can be defined in several equivalent ways.
Inverse of exponential
The most general definition is as the inverse function of , so that
. Because
is positive and invertible for any real input
, this definition of
is well defined for any positive x.
Integral definition
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The natural logarithm of a positive, real number a may be defined as the area under the graph of the hyperbola with equation y = 1/x between x = 1 and x = a. This is the integral If a is in
, then the region has negative area, and the logarithm is negative.
This function is a logarithm because it satisfies the fundamental multiplicative property of a logarithm:
This can be demonstrated by splitting the integral that defines ln ab into two parts, and then making the variable substitution x = at (so dx = a dt) in the second part, as follows:
In elementary terms, this is simply scaling by 1/a in the horizontal direction and by a in the vertical direction. Area does not change under this transformation, but the region between a and ab is reconfigured. Because the function a/(ax) is equal to the function 1/x, the resulting area is precisely ln b.
The number e can then be defined to be the unique real number a such that ln a = 1.
Properties
The natural logarithm has the following mathematical properties:
Derivative
The derivative of the natural logarithm as a real-valued function on the positive reals is given by
How to establish this derivative of the natural logarithm depends on how it is defined firsthand. If the natural logarithm is defined as the integral then the derivative immediately follows from the first part of the fundamental theorem of calculus.
On the other hand, if the natural logarithm is defined as the inverse of the (natural) exponential function, then the derivative (for x > 0) can be found by using the properties of the logarithm and a definition of the exponential function.
From the definition of the number the exponential function can be defined as
where
The derivative can then be found from first principles.
Also, we have:
so, unlike its inverse function , a constant in the function doesn't alter the differential.
Series
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Since the natural logarithm is undefined at 0, itself does not have a Maclaurin series, unlike many other elementary functions. Instead, one looks for Taylor expansions around other points. For example, if
then
This is the Taylor series for around 1. A change of variables yields the Mercator series:
valid for
and
Leonhard Euler, disregarding , nevertheless applied this series to
to show that the harmonic series equals the natural logarithm of
; that is, the logarithm of infinity. Nowadays, more formally, one can prove that the harmonic series truncated at N is close to the logarithm of N, when N is large, with the difference converging to the Euler–Mascheroni constant.
The figure is a graph of ln(1 + x) and some of its Taylor polynomials around 0. These approximations converge to the function only in the region −1 < x ≤ 1; outside this region, the higher-degree Taylor polynomials devolve to worse approximations for the function.
A useful special case for positive integers n, taking , is:
If then
Now, taking for positive integers n, we get:
If then
Since
we arrive at
Using the substitution
again for positive integers n, we get:
This is, by far, the fastest converging of the series described here.
The natural logarithm can also be expressed as an infinite product:
Two examples might be:
From this identity, we can easily get that:
For example:
The natural logarithm in integration
The natural logarithm allows simple integration of functions of the form : an antiderivative of g(x) is given by
. This is the case because of the chain rule and the following fact:
In other words, when integrating over an interval of the real line that does not include , then
where C is an arbitrary constant of integration.
Likewise, when the integral is over an interval where ,
For example, consider the integral of over an interval that does not include points where
is infinite:
The natural logarithm can be integrated using integration by parts:
Let:
then:
Efficient computation
For where x > 1, the closer the value of x is to 1, the faster the rate of convergence of its Taylor series centered at 1. The identities associated with the logarithm can be leveraged to exploit this:
Such techniques were used before calculators, by referring to numerical tables and performing manipulations such as those above.
Natural logarithm of 10
The natural logarithm of 10, approximately equal to 2.30258509, plays a role for example in the computation of natural logarithms of numbers represented in scientific notation, as a mantissa multiplied by a power of 10:
This means that one can effectively calculate the logarithms of numbers with very large or very small magnitude using the logarithms of a relatively small set of decimals in the range [1, 10).
High precision
To compute the natural logarithm with many digits of precision, the Taylor series approach is not efficient since the convergence is slow. Especially if x is near 1, a good alternative is to use Halley's method or Newton's method to invert the exponential function, because the series of the exponential function converges more quickly. For finding the value of y to give using Halley's method, or equivalently to give
using Newton's method, the iteration simplifies to
which has cubic convergence to
.
Another alternative for extremely high precision calculation is the formula where M denotes the arithmetic-geometric mean of 1 and 4/s, and
with m chosen so that p bits of precision is attained. (For most purposes, the value of 8 for m is sufficient.) In fact, if this method is used, Newton inversion of the natural logarithm may conversely be used to calculate the exponential function efficiently. (The constants
and π can be pre-computed to the desired precision using any of several known quickly converging series.) Or, the following formula can be used:
where are the Jacobi theta functions.
Based on a proposal by William Kahan and first implemented in the Hewlett-Packard HP-41C calculator in 1979 (referred to under "LN1" in the display, only), some calculators, operating systems (for example Berkeley UNIX 4.3BSD), computer algebra systems and programming languages (for example C99) provide a special natural logarithm plus 1 function, alternatively named LNP1, or log1p to give more accurate results for logarithms close to zero by passing arguments x, also close to zero, to a function log1p(x), which returns the value ln(1+x), instead of passing a value y close to 1 to a function returning ln(y). The function log1p avoids in the floating point arithmetic a near cancelling of the absolute term 1 with the second term from the Taylor expansion of the natural logarithm. This keeps the argument, the result, and intermediate steps all close to zero where they can be most accurately represented as floating-point numbers.
In addition to base e, the IEEE 754-2008 standard defines similar logarithmic functions near 1 for binary and decimal logarithms: log2(1 + x) and log10(1 + x).
Similar inverse functions named "expm1", "expm" or "exp1m" exist as well, all with the meaning of expm1(x) = exp(x) − 1.
An identity in terms of the inverse hyperbolic tangent, gives a high precision value for small values of x on systems that do not implement log1p(x).
Computational complexity
The computational complexity of computing the natural logarithm using the arithmetic-geometric mean (for both of the above methods) is . Here, n is the number of digits of precision at which the natural logarithm is to be evaluated, and M(n) is the computational complexity of multiplying two n-digit numbers.
Continued fractions
While no simple continued fractions are available, several generalized continued fractions exist, including:
These continued fractions—particularly the last—converge rapidly for values close to 1. However, the natural logarithms of much larger numbers can easily be computed, by repeatedly adding those of smaller numbers, with similarly rapid convergence.
For example, since 2 = 1.253 × 1.024, the natural logarithm of 2 can be computed as:
Furthermore, since 10 = 1.2510 × 1.0243, even the natural logarithm of 10 can be computed similarly as: The reciprocal of the natural logarithm can be also written in this way:
For example:
Complex logarithms
The exponential function can be extended to a function which gives a complex number as ez for any arbitrary complex number z; simply use the infinite series with x=z complex. This exponential function can be inverted to form a complex logarithm that exhibits most of the properties of the ordinary logarithm. There are two difficulties involved: no x has ex = 0; and it turns out that e2iπ = 1 = e0. Since the multiplicative property still works for the complex exponential function, ez = ez+2kiπ, for all complex z and integers k.
So the logarithm cannot be defined for the whole complex plane, and even then it is multi-valued—any complex logarithm can be changed into an "equivalent" logarithm by adding any integer multiple of 2iπ at will. The complex logarithm can only be single-valued on the cut plane. For example, ln i = iπ/2 or 5iπ/2 or -3iπ/2, etc.; and although i4 = 1, 4 ln i can be defined as 2iπ, or 10iπ or −6iπ, and so on.
- Plots of the natural logarithm function on the complex plane (principal branch)
- z = Re(ln(x + yi))
- z = |(Im(ln(x + yi)))|
- z = |(ln(x + yi))|
- Superposition of the previous three graphs
See also
- Iterated logarithm
- Napierian logarithm
- List of logarithmic identities
- Logarithm of a matrix
- Logarithmic coordinates of an element of a Lie group.
- Logarithmic differentiation
- Logarithmic integral function
- Nicholas Mercator – first to use the term natural logarithm
- Polylogarithm
- Von Mangoldt function
Notes
- Including C, C++, SAS, MATLAB, Mathematica, Fortran, and some BASIC dialects
- For a similar approach to reduce round-off errors of calculations for certain input values see trigonometric functions like versine, vercosine, coversine, covercosine, haversine, havercosine, hacoversine, hacovercosine, exsecant and excosecant.
References
- Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A001113 (Decimal expansion of e)". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
- G.H. Hardy and E.M. Wright, An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers, 4th Ed., Oxford 1975, footnote to paragraph 1.7: "log x is, of course, the 'Naperian' logarithm of x, to base e. 'Common' logarithms have no mathematical interest".
- Mortimer, Robert G. (2005). Mathematics for physical chemistry (3rd ed.). Academic Press. p. 9. ISBN 0-12-508347-5. Extract of page 9
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Natural Logarithm". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-29.
- "Rules, Examples, & Formulas". Logarithm. Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-08-29.
- Burn, R.P. (2001). "Alphonse Antonio de Sarasa and logarithms". Historia Mathematica. 28: 1–17. doi:10.1006/hmat.2000.2295.
- O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. (September 2001). "The number e". The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
- Cajori, Florian (1991). A History of Mathematics (5th ed.). AMS Bookstore. p. 152. ISBN 0-8218-2102-4.
- ""Logarithmic Expansions" at Math2.org".
- Leonhard Euler, Introductio in Analysin Infinitorum. Tomus Primus. Bousquet, Lausanne 1748. Exemplum 1, p. 228; quoque in: Opera Omnia, Series Prima, Opera Mathematica, Volumen Octavum, Teubner 1922
- RUFFA, Anthony. "A PROCEDURE FOR GENERATING INFINITE SERIES IDENTITIES" (PDF). International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences. Retrieved 2022-02-27. (Page 3654, equation 2.6)
- For a detailed proof see for instance: George B. Thomas, Jr and Ross L. Finney, Calculus and Analytic Geometry, 5th edition, Addison-Wesley 1979, Section 6-5 pages 305-306.
- Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A002392 (Decimal expansion of natural logarithm of 10)". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
- Sasaki, T.; Kanada, Y. (1982). "Practically fast multiple-precision evaluation of log(x)". Journal of Information Processing. 5 (4): 247–250. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
- Ahrendt, Timm (1999). "Fast Computations of the Exponential Function". Stacs 99. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 1564. pp. 302–312. doi:10.1007/3-540-49116-3_28. ISBN 978-3-540-65691-3.
- Borwein, Jonathan M.; Borwein, Peter B. (1987). Pi and the AGM: A Study in Analytic Number Theory and Computational Complexity (First ed.). Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 0-471-83138-7. page 225
- Beebe, Nelson H. F. (2017-08-22). "Chapter 10.4. Logarithm near one". The Mathematical-Function Computation Handbook - Programming Using the MathCW Portable Software Library (1 ed.). Salt Lake City, UT, USA: Springer International Publishing AG. pp. 290–292. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-64110-2. ISBN 978-3-319-64109-6. LCCN 2017947446. S2CID 30244721.
In 1987, Berkeley UNIX 4.3BSD introduced the log1p() function
- Beebe, Nelson H. F. (2002-07-09). "Computation of expm1 = exp(x)−1" (PDF). 1.00. Salt Lake City, Utah, USA: Department of Mathematics, Center for Scientific Computing, University of Utah. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
- HP 48G Series – Advanced User's Reference Manual (AUR) (4 ed.). Hewlett-Packard. December 1994 [1993]. HP 00048-90136, 0-88698-01574-2. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- HP 50g / 49g+ / 48gII graphing calculator advanced user's reference manual (AUR) (2 ed.). Hewlett-Packard. 2009-07-14 [2005]. HP F2228-90010. Retrieved 2015-10-10. Searchable PDF
The natural logarithm of a number is its logarithm to the base of the mathematical constant e which is an irrational and transcendental number approximately equal to 2 718281 828 459 The natural logarithm of x is generally written as ln x logex or sometimes if the base e is implicit simply log x Parentheses are sometimes added for clarity giving ln x loge x or log x This is done particularly when the argument to the logarithm is not a single symbol so as to prevent ambiguity Natural logarithmGraph of part of the natural logarithm function The function slowly grows to positive infinity as x increases and slowly goes to negative infinity as x approaches 0 slowly as compared to any power law of x General informationGeneral definitionMotivation of inventionhyperbola quadratureFields of applicationPure and applied mathematicsDomain codomain and imageDomainR gt 0 displaystyle mathbb R gt 0 CodomainR displaystyle mathbb R ImageR displaystyle mathbb R Specific valuesValue at Value at e1Value at 10Value at 0 Specific featuresAsymptotex 0 displaystyle x 0 Root1Inverseexp x displaystyle exp x Derivativeddxln x 1x x gt 0 displaystyle dfrac d dx ln x dfrac 1 x x gt 0 Antiderivative ln xdx x ln x 1 C displaystyle int ln x dx x left ln x 1 right C The natural logarithm of x is the power to which e would have to be raised to equal x For example ln 7 5 is 2 0149 because e2 0149 7 5 The natural logarithm of e itself ln e is 1 because e1 e while the natural logarithm of 1 is 0 since e0 1 The natural logarithm can be defined for any positive real number a as the area under the curve y 1 x from 1 to a with the area being negative when 0 lt a lt 1 The simplicity of this definition which is matched in many other formulas involving the natural logarithm leads to the term natural The definition of the natural logarithm can then be extended to give logarithm values for negative numbers and for all non zero complex numbers although this leads to a multi valued function see complex logarithm for more The natural logarithm function if considered as a real valued function of a positive real variable is the inverse function of the exponential function leading to the identities eln x x if x R ln ex x if x R displaystyle begin aligned e ln x amp x qquad text if x in mathbb R ln e x amp x qquad text if x in mathbb R end aligned Like all logarithms the natural logarithm maps multiplication of positive numbers into addition ln x y ln x ln y displaystyle ln x cdot y ln x ln y Logarithms can be defined for any positive base other than 1 not only e However logarithms in other bases differ only by a constant multiplier from the natural logarithm and can be defined in terms of the latter logb x ln x ln b ln x logb e displaystyle log b x ln x ln b ln x cdot log b e Logarithms are useful for solving equations in which the unknown appears as the exponent of some other quantity For example logarithms are used to solve for the half life decay constant or unknown time in exponential decay problems They are important in many branches of mathematics and scientific disciplines and are used to solve problems involving compound interest HistoryThe concept of the natural logarithm was worked out by Gregoire de Saint Vincent and Alphonse Antonio de Sarasa before 1649 Their work involved quadrature of the hyperbola with equation xy 1 by determination of the area of hyperbolic sectors Their solution generated the requisite hyperbolic logarithm function which had the properties now associated with the natural logarithm An early mention of the natural logarithm was by Nicholas Mercator in his work Logarithmotechnia published in 1668 although the mathematics teacher John Speidell had already compiled a table of what in fact were effectively natural logarithms in 1619 It has been said that Speidell s logarithms were to the base e but this is not entirely true due to complications with the values being expressed as integers 152 Notational conventionsThe notations ln x and logex both refer unambiguously to the natural logarithm of x and log x without an explicit base may also refer to the natural logarithm This usage is common in mathematics along with some scientific contexts as well as in many programming languages In some other contexts such as chemistry however log x can be used to denote the common base 10 logarithm It may also refer to the binary base 2 logarithm in the context of computer science particularly in the context of time complexity Generally the notation for the logarithm to base b of a number x is shown as logbx So the log of 8 to the base 2 would be log2 8 3 DefinitionsThe natural logarithm can be defined in several equivalent ways Inverse of exponential The most general definition is as the inverse function of ex displaystyle e x so that eln x x displaystyle e ln x x Because ex displaystyle e x is positive and invertible for any real input x displaystyle x this definition of ln x displaystyle ln x is well defined for any positive x Integral definition ln a as the area of the shaded region under the curve f x 1 x from 1 to a If a is less than 1 the area taken to be negative The area under the hyperbola satisfies the logarithm rule Here A s t denotes the area under the hyperbola between s and t The natural logarithm of a positive real number a may be defined as the area under the graph of the hyperbola with equation y 1 x between x 1 and x a This is the integralln a 1a1xdx displaystyle ln a int 1 a frac 1 x dx If a is in 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 then the region has negative area and the logarithm is negative This function is a logarithm because it satisfies the fundamental multiplicative property of a logarithm ln ab ln a ln b displaystyle ln ab ln a ln b This can be demonstrated by splitting the integral that defines ln ab into two parts and then making the variable substitution x at so dx a dt in the second part as follows ln ab 1ab1xdx 1a1xdx aab1xdx 1a1xdx 1b1atadt 1a1xdx 1b1tdt ln a ln b displaystyle begin aligned ln ab int 1 ab frac 1 x dx amp int 1 a frac 1 x dx int a ab frac 1 x dx 5pt amp int 1 a frac 1 x dx int 1 b frac 1 at a dt 5pt amp int 1 a frac 1 x dx int 1 b frac 1 t dt 5pt amp ln a ln b end aligned In elementary terms this is simply scaling by 1 a in the horizontal direction and by a in the vertical direction Area does not change under this transformation but the region between a and ab is reconfigured Because the function a ax is equal to the function 1 x the resulting area is precisely ln b The number e can then be defined to be the unique real number a such that ln a 1 PropertiesThe natural logarithm has the following mathematical properties ln 1 0 displaystyle ln 1 0 ln e 1 displaystyle ln e 1 ln xy ln x ln yfor x gt 0and y gt 0 displaystyle ln xy ln x ln y quad text for x gt 0 text and y gt 0 ln x y ln x ln yfor x gt 0and y gt 0 displaystyle ln x y ln x ln y quad text for x gt 0 text and y gt 0 ln xy yln xfor x gt 0 displaystyle ln x y y ln x quad text for x gt 0 ln xy ln x yfor x gt 0and y 0 displaystyle ln sqrt y x ln x y quad text for x gt 0 text and y neq 0 ln x lt ln yfor 0 lt x lt y displaystyle ln x lt ln y quad text for 0 lt x lt y limx 0ln 1 x x 1 displaystyle lim x to 0 frac ln 1 x x 1 lima 0xa 1a ln xfor x gt 0 displaystyle lim alpha to 0 frac x alpha 1 alpha ln x quad text for x gt 0 x 1x ln x x 1forx gt 0 displaystyle frac x 1 x leq ln x leq x 1 quad text for quad x gt 0 ln 1 xa axforx 0and a 1 displaystyle ln 1 x alpha leq alpha x quad text for quad x geq 0 text and alpha geq 1 DerivativeThe derivative of the natural logarithm as a real valued function on the positive reals is given byddxln x 1x displaystyle frac d dx ln x frac 1 x How to establish this derivative of the natural logarithm depends on how it is defined firsthand If the natural logarithm is defined as the integral ln x 1x1tdt displaystyle ln x int 1 x frac 1 t dt then the derivative immediately follows from the first part of the fundamental theorem of calculus On the other hand if the natural logarithm is defined as the inverse of the natural exponential function then the derivative for x gt 0 can be found by using the properties of the logarithm and a definition of the exponential function From the definition of the number e limu 0 1 u 1 u displaystyle e lim u to 0 1 u 1 u the exponential function can be defined as ex limu 0 1 u x u limh 0 1 hx 1 h displaystyle e x lim u to 0 1 u x u lim h to 0 1 hx 1 h where u hx h ux displaystyle u hx h frac u x The derivative can then be found from first principles ddxln x limh 0ln x h ln xh limh 0 1hln x hx limh 0 ln 1 hx 1h all above for logarithmic properties ln limh 0 1 hx 1h for continuity of the logarithm ln e1 xfor the definition of ex limh 0 1 hx 1 h 1xfor the definition of the ln as inverse function displaystyle begin aligned frac d dx ln x amp lim h to 0 frac ln x h ln x h amp lim h to 0 left frac 1 h ln left frac x h x right right amp lim h to 0 left ln left 1 frac h x right frac 1 h right quad amp amp text all above for logarithmic properties amp ln left lim h to 0 left 1 frac h x right frac 1 h right quad amp amp text for continuity of the logarithm amp ln e 1 x quad amp amp text for the definition of e x lim h to 0 1 hx 1 h amp frac 1 x quad amp amp text for the definition of the ln as inverse function end aligned Also we have ddxln ax ddx ln a ln x ddxln a ddxln x 1x displaystyle frac d dx ln ax frac d dx ln a ln x frac d dx ln a frac d dx ln x frac 1 x so unlike its inverse function eax displaystyle e ax a constant in the function doesn t alter the differential SeriesThe Taylor polynomials for ln 1 x only provide accurate approximations in the range 1 lt x 1 Beyond some x gt 1 the Taylor polynomials of higher degree are increasingly worse approximations Since the natural logarithm is undefined at 0 ln x displaystyle ln x itself does not have a Maclaurin series unlike many other elementary functions Instead one looks for Taylor expansions around other points For example if x 1 1 and x 0 displaystyle vert x 1 vert leq 1 text and x neq 0 thenln x 1x1tdt 0x 111 udu 0x 1 1 u u2 u3 du x 1 x 1 22 x 1 33 x 1 44 k 1 1 k 1 x 1 kk displaystyle begin aligned ln x amp int 1 x frac 1 t dt int 0 x 1 frac 1 1 u du amp int 0 x 1 1 u u 2 u 3 cdots du amp x 1 frac x 1 2 2 frac x 1 3 3 frac x 1 4 4 cdots amp sum k 1 infty frac 1 k 1 x 1 k k end aligned This is the Taylor series for ln x displaystyle ln x around 1 A change of variables yields the Mercator series ln 1 x k 1 1 k 1kxk x x22 x33 displaystyle ln 1 x sum k 1 infty frac 1 k 1 k x k x frac x 2 2 frac x 3 3 cdots valid for x 1 displaystyle x leq 1 and x 1 displaystyle x neq 1 Leonhard Euler disregarding x 1 displaystyle x neq 1 nevertheless applied this series to x 1 displaystyle x 1 to show that the harmonic series equals the natural logarithm of 11 1 displaystyle frac 1 1 1 that is the logarithm of infinity Nowadays more formally one can prove that the harmonic series truncated at N is close to the logarithm of N when N is large with the difference converging to the Euler Mascheroni constant The figure is a graph of ln 1 x and some of its Taylor polynomials around 0 These approximations converge to the function only in the region 1 lt x 1 outside this region the higher degree Taylor polynomials devolve to worse approximations for the function A useful special case for positive integers n taking x 1n displaystyle x tfrac 1 n is ln n 1n k 1 1 k 1knk 1n 12n2 13n3 14n4 displaystyle ln left frac n 1 n right sum k 1 infty frac 1 k 1 kn k frac 1 n frac 1 2n 2 frac 1 3n 3 frac 1 4n 4 cdots If Re x 1 2 displaystyle operatorname Re x geq 1 2 then ln x ln 1x k 1 1 k 1 1x 1 kk k 1 x 1 kkxk x 1x x 1 22x2 x 1 33x3 x 1 44x4 displaystyle begin aligned ln x amp ln left frac 1 x right sum k 1 infty frac 1 k 1 frac 1 x 1 k k sum k 1 infty frac x 1 k kx k amp frac x 1 x frac x 1 2 2x 2 frac x 1 3 3x 3 frac x 1 4 4x 4 cdots end aligned Now taking x n 1n displaystyle x tfrac n 1 n for positive integers n we get ln n 1n k 1 1k n 1 k 1n 1 12 n 1 2 13 n 1 3 14 n 1 4 displaystyle ln left frac n 1 n right sum k 1 infty frac 1 k n 1 k frac 1 n 1 frac 1 2 n 1 2 frac 1 3 n 1 3 frac 1 4 n 1 4 cdots If Re x 0 and x 0 displaystyle operatorname Re x geq 0 text and x neq 0 then ln x ln 2x2 ln 1 x 1x 11 x 1x 1 ln 1 x 1x 1 ln 1 x 1x 1 displaystyle ln x ln left frac 2x 2 right ln left frac 1 frac x 1 x 1 1 frac x 1 x 1 right ln left 1 frac x 1 x 1 right ln left 1 frac x 1 x 1 right Since ln 1 y ln 1 y i 1 1i 1 i 1yi 1 i 1 y i i 1 yii 1 i 1 1 y i 1 yi 1i 1 i 1 1 i 1 2k2y k 0 y2k2k 1 displaystyle begin aligned ln 1 y ln 1 y amp sum i 1 infty frac 1 i left 1 i 1 y i 1 i 1 y i right sum i 1 infty frac y i i left 1 i 1 1 right amp y sum i 1 infty frac y i 1 i left 1 i 1 1 right overset i 1 to 2k 2y sum k 0 infty frac y 2k 2k 1 end aligned we arrive at ln x 2 x 1 x 1 k 0 12k 1 x 1 2 x 1 2 k 2 x 1 x 1 11 13 x 1 2 x 1 2 15 x 1 2 x 1 2 2 displaystyle begin aligned ln x amp frac 2 x 1 x 1 sum k 0 infty frac 1 2k 1 left frac x 1 2 x 1 2 right k amp frac 2 x 1 x 1 left frac 1 1 frac 1 3 frac x 1 2 x 1 2 frac 1 5 left frac x 1 2 x 1 2 right 2 cdots right end aligned Using the substitution x n 1n displaystyle x tfrac n 1 n again for positive integers n we get ln n 1n 22n 1 k 0 1 2k 1 2n 1 2 k 2 12n 1 13 2n 1 3 15 2n 1 5 displaystyle begin aligned ln left frac n 1 n right amp frac 2 2n 1 sum k 0 infty frac 1 2k 1 2n 1 2 k amp 2 left frac 1 2n 1 frac 1 3 2n 1 3 frac 1 5 2n 1 5 cdots right end aligned This is by far the fastest converging of the series described here The natural logarithm can also be expressed as an infinite product ln x x 1 k 1 21 x2k displaystyle ln x x 1 prod k 1 infty left frac 2 1 sqrt 2 k x right Two examples might be ln 2 21 2 21 24 21 28 21 216 displaystyle ln 2 left frac 2 1 sqrt 2 right left frac 2 1 sqrt 4 2 right left frac 2 1 sqrt 8 2 right left frac 2 1 sqrt 16 2 right p 2i 2 21 i 21 i4 21 i8 21 i16 displaystyle pi 2i 2 left frac 2 1 sqrt i right left frac 2 1 sqrt 4 i right left frac 2 1 sqrt 8 i right left frac 2 1 sqrt 16 i right From this identity we can easily get that 1ln x xx 1 k 1 2 kx2 k1 x2 k displaystyle frac 1 ln x frac x x 1 sum k 1 infty frac 2 k x 2 k 1 x 2 k For example 1ln 2 2 22 22 244 424 288 828 displaystyle frac 1 ln 2 2 frac sqrt 2 2 2 sqrt 2 frac sqrt 4 2 4 4 sqrt 4 2 frac sqrt 8 2 8 8 sqrt 8 2 cdots The natural logarithm in integrationThe natural logarithm allows simple integration of functions of the form g x f x f x displaystyle g x frac f x f x an antiderivative of g x is given by ln f x displaystyle ln f x This is the case because of the chain rule and the following fact ddxln x 1x x 0 displaystyle frac d dx ln left x right frac 1 x x neq 0 In other words when integrating over an interval of the real line that does not include x 0 displaystyle x 0 then 1xdx ln x C displaystyle int frac 1 x dx ln x C where C is an arbitrary constant of integration Likewise when the integral is over an interval where f x 0 displaystyle f x neq 0 f x f x dx ln f x C displaystyle int frac f x f x dx ln f x C For example consider the integral of tan x displaystyle tan x over an interval that does not include points where tan x displaystyle tan x is infinite tan xdx sin xcos xdx ddxcos xcos xdx ln cos x C ln sec x C displaystyle int tan x dx int frac sin x cos x dx int frac frac d dx cos x cos x dx ln left cos x right C ln left sec x right C The natural logarithm can be integrated using integration by parts ln xdx xln x x C displaystyle int ln x dx x ln x x C Let u ln x du dxx displaystyle u ln x Rightarrow du frac dx x dv dx v x displaystyle dv dx Rightarrow v x then ln xdx xln x xxdx xln x 1dx xln x x C displaystyle begin aligned int ln x dx amp x ln x int frac x x dx amp x ln x int 1 dx amp x ln x x C end aligned Efficient computationFor ln x displaystyle ln x where x gt 1 the closer the value of x is to 1 the faster the rate of convergence of its Taylor series centered at 1 The identities associated with the logarithm can be leveraged to exploit this ln 123 456 ln 1 23456 102 ln 1 23456 ln 102 ln 1 23456 2ln 10 ln 1 23456 2 2 3025851 displaystyle begin aligned ln 123 456 amp ln 1 23456 cdot 10 2 amp ln 1 23456 ln 10 2 amp ln 1 23456 2 ln 10 amp approx ln 1 23456 2 cdot 2 3025851 end aligned Such techniques were used before calculators by referring to numerical tables and performing manipulations such as those above Natural logarithm of 10 The natural logarithm of 10 approximately equal to 2 302585 09 plays a role for example in the computation of natural logarithms of numbers represented in scientific notation as a mantissa multiplied by a power of 10 ln a 10n ln a nln 10 displaystyle ln a cdot 10 n ln a n ln 10 This means that one can effectively calculate the logarithms of numbers with very large or very small magnitude using the logarithms of a relatively small set of decimals in the range 1 10 High precision To compute the natural logarithm with many digits of precision the Taylor series approach is not efficient since the convergence is slow Especially if x is near 1 a good alternative is to use Halley s method or Newton s method to invert the exponential function because the series of the exponential function converges more quickly For finding the value of y to give exp y x 0 displaystyle exp y x 0 using Halley s method or equivalently to give exp y 2 xexp y 2 0 displaystyle exp y 2 x exp y 2 0 using Newton s method the iteration simplifies to yn 1 yn 2 x exp yn x exp yn displaystyle y n 1 y n 2 cdot frac x exp y n x exp y n which has cubic convergence to ln x displaystyle ln x Another alternative for extremely high precision calculation is the formulaln x p2M 1 4 s mln 2 displaystyle ln x approx frac pi 2M 1 4 s m ln 2 where M denotes the arithmetic geometric mean of 1 and 4 s and s x2m gt 2p 2 displaystyle s x2 m gt 2 p 2 with m chosen so that p bits of precision is attained For most purposes the value of 8 for m is sufficient In fact if this method is used Newton inversion of the natural logarithm may conversely be used to calculate the exponential function efficiently The constants ln 2 displaystyle ln 2 and p can be pre computed to the desired precision using any of several known quickly converging series Or the following formula can be used ln x pM 822 1 x 832 1 x x 1 displaystyle ln x frac pi M left theta 2 2 1 x theta 3 2 1 x right quad x in 1 infty where 82 x n Zx n 1 2 2 83 x n Zxn2 displaystyle theta 2 x sum n in mathbb Z x n 1 2 2 quad theta 3 x sum n in mathbb Z x n 2 are the Jacobi theta functions Based on a proposal by William Kahan and first implemented in the Hewlett Packard HP 41C calculator in 1979 referred to under LN1 in the display only some calculators operating systems for example Berkeley UNIX 4 3BSD computer algebra systems and programming languages for example C99 provide a special natural logarithm plus 1 function alternatively named LNP1 or log1p to give more accurate results for logarithms close to zero by passing arguments x also close to zero to a function log1p x which returns the value ln 1 x instead of passing a value y close to 1 to a function returning ln y The function log1p avoids in the floating point arithmetic a near cancelling of the absolute term 1 with the second term from the Taylor expansion of the natural logarithm This keeps the argument the result and intermediate steps all close to zero where they can be most accurately represented as floating point numbers In addition to base e the IEEE 754 2008 standard defines similar logarithmic functions near 1 for binary and decimal logarithms log2 1 x and log10 1 x Similar inverse functions named expm1 expm or exp1m exist as well all with the meaning of expm1 x exp x 1 An identity in terms of the inverse hyperbolic tangent log1p x log 1 x 2 artanh x2 x displaystyle mathrm log1p x log 1 x 2 mathrm artanh left frac x 2 x right gives a high precision value for small values of x on systems that do not implement log1p x Computational complexity The computational complexity of computing the natural logarithm using the arithmetic geometric mean for both of the above methods is O M n ln n displaystyle text O bigl M n ln n bigr Here n is the number of digits of precision at which the natural logarithm is to be evaluated and M n is the computational complexity of multiplying two n digit numbers Continued fractionsWhile no simple continued fractions are available several generalized continued fractions exist including ln 1 x x11 x22 x33 x44 x55 x1 0x 12x2 1x 22x3 2x 32x4 3x 42x5 4x displaystyle begin aligned ln 1 x amp frac x 1 1 frac x 2 2 frac x 3 3 frac x 4 4 frac x 5 5 cdots 5pt amp cfrac x 1 0x cfrac 1 2 x 2 1x cfrac 2 2 x 3 2x cfrac 3 2 x 4 3x cfrac 4 2 x 5 4x ddots end aligned ln 1 xy xy 1x2 1x3y 2x2 2x5y 3x2 2x2y x 1x 23 2y x 2x 25 2y x 3x 27 2y x displaystyle begin aligned ln left 1 frac x y right amp cfrac x y cfrac 1x 2 cfrac 1x 3y cfrac 2x 2 cfrac 2x 5y cfrac 3x 2 ddots 5pt amp cfrac 2x 2y x cfrac 1x 2 3 2y x cfrac 2x 2 5 2y x cfrac 3x 2 7 2y x ddots end aligned These continued fractions particularly the last converge rapidly for values close to 1 However the natural logarithms of much larger numbers can easily be computed by repeatedly adding those of smaller numbers with similarly rapid convergence For example since 2 1 253 1 024 the natural logarithm of 2 can be computed as ln 2 3ln 1 14 ln 1 3125 69 1227 2245 3263 6253 32759 621265 921771 displaystyle begin aligned ln 2 amp 3 ln left 1 frac 1 4 right ln left 1 frac 3 125 right 8pt amp cfrac 6 9 cfrac 1 2 27 cfrac 2 2 45 cfrac 3 2 63 ddots cfrac 6 253 cfrac 3 2 759 cfrac 6 2 1265 cfrac 9 2 1771 ddots end aligned Furthermore since 10 1 2510 1 0243 even the natural logarithm of 10 can be computed similarly as ln 10 10ln 1 14 3ln 1 3125 209 1227 2245 3263 18253 32759 621265 921771 displaystyle begin aligned ln 10 amp 10 ln left 1 frac 1 4 right 3 ln left 1 frac 3 125 right 10pt amp cfrac 20 9 cfrac 1 2 27 cfrac 2 2 45 cfrac 3 2 63 ddots cfrac 18 253 cfrac 3 2 759 cfrac 6 2 1265 cfrac 9 2 1771 ddots end aligned The reciprocal of the natural logarithm can be also written in this way 1ln x 2xx2 112 x2 14x12 1212 x2 14x displaystyle frac 1 ln x frac 2x x 2 1 sqrt frac 1 2 frac x 2 1 4x sqrt frac 1 2 frac 1 2 sqrt frac 1 2 frac x 2 1 4x ldots For example 1ln 2 4312 5812 1212 58 displaystyle frac 1 ln 2 frac 4 3 sqrt frac 1 2 frac 5 8 sqrt frac 1 2 frac 1 2 sqrt frac 1 2 frac 5 8 ldots Complex logarithmsThe exponential function can be extended to a function which gives a complex number as ez for any arbitrary complex number z simply use the infinite series with x z complex This exponential function can be inverted to form a complex logarithm that exhibits most of the properties of the ordinary logarithm There are two difficulties involved no x has ex 0 and it turns out that e2ip 1 e0 Since the multiplicative property still works for the complex exponential function ez ez 2kip for all complex z and integers k So the logarithm cannot be defined for the whole complex plane and even then it is multi valued any complex logarithm can be changed into an equivalent logarithm by adding any integer multiple of 2ip at will The complex logarithm can only be single valued on the cut plane For example ln i ip 2 or 5ip 2 or 3ip 2 etc and although i4 1 4 ln i can be defined as 2ip or 10ip or 6ip and so on Plots of the natural logarithm function on the complex plane principal branch z Re ln x yi z Im ln x yi z ln x yi Superposition of the previous three graphsSee alsoIterated logarithm Napierian logarithm List of logarithmic identities Logarithm of a matrix Logarithmic coordinates of an element of a Lie group Logarithmic differentiation Logarithmic integral function Nicholas Mercator first to use the term natural logarithm Polylogarithm Von Mangoldt functionNotesIncluding C C SAS MATLAB Mathematica Fortran and some BASIC dialects For a similar approach to reduce round off errors of calculations for certain input values see trigonometric functions like versine vercosine coversine covercosine haversine havercosine hacoversine hacovercosine exsecant and excosecant ReferencesSloane N J A ed Sequence A001113 Decimal expansion of e The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation G H Hardy and E M Wright An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers 4th Ed Oxford 1975 footnote to paragraph 1 7 log x is of course the Naperian logarithm of x to base e Common logarithms have no mathematical interest Mortimer Robert G 2005 Mathematics for physical chemistry 3rd ed Academic Press p 9 ISBN 0 12 508347 5 Extract of page 9 Weisstein Eric W Natural Logarithm mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2020 08 29 Rules Examples amp Formulas Logarithm Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 08 29 Burn R P 2001 Alphonse Antonio de Sarasa and logarithms Historia Mathematica 28 1 17 doi 10 1006 hmat 2000 2295 O Connor J J Robertson E F September 2001 The number e The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive Retrieved 2009 02 02 Cajori Florian 1991 A History of Mathematics 5th ed AMS Bookstore p 152 ISBN 0 8218 2102 4 Logarithmic Expansions at Math2 org Leonhard Euler Introductio in Analysin Infinitorum Tomus Primus Bousquet Lausanne 1748 Exemplum 1 p 228 quoque in Opera Omnia Series Prima Opera Mathematica Volumen Octavum Teubner 1922 RUFFA Anthony A PROCEDURE FOR GENERATING INFINITE SERIES IDENTITIES PDF International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences Retrieved 2022 02 27 Page 3654 equation 2 6 For a detailed proof see for instance George B Thomas Jr and Ross L Finney Calculus and Analytic Geometry 5th edition Addison Wesley 1979 Section 6 5 pages 305 306 Sloane N J A ed Sequence A002392 Decimal expansion of natural logarithm of 10 The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation Sasaki T Kanada Y 1982 Practically fast multiple precision evaluation of log x Journal of Information Processing 5 4 247 250 Retrieved 2011 03 30 Ahrendt Timm 1999 Fast Computations of the Exponential Function Stacs 99 Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 1564 pp 302 312 doi 10 1007 3 540 49116 3 28 ISBN 978 3 540 65691 3 Borwein Jonathan M Borwein Peter B 1987 Pi and the AGM A Study in Analytic Number Theory and Computational Complexity First ed Wiley Interscience ISBN 0 471 83138 7 page 225 Beebe Nelson H F 2017 08 22 Chapter 10 4 Logarithm near one The Mathematical Function Computation Handbook Programming Using the MathCW Portable Software Library 1 ed Salt Lake City UT USA Springer International Publishing AG pp 290 292 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 64110 2 ISBN 978 3 319 64109 6 LCCN 2017947446 S2CID 30244721 In 1987 Berkeley UNIX 4 3BSD introduced the log1p function Beebe Nelson H F 2002 07 09 Computation of expm1 exp x 1 PDF 1 00 Salt Lake City Utah USA Department of Mathematics Center for Scientific Computing University of Utah Retrieved 2015 11 02 HP 48G Series Advanced User s Reference Manual AUR 4 ed Hewlett Packard December 1994 1993 HP 00048 90136 0 88698 01574 2 Retrieved 2015 09 06 HP 50g 49g 48gII graphing calculator advanced user s reference manual AUR 2 ed Hewlett Packard 2009 07 14 2005 HP F2228 90010 Retrieved 2015 10 10 Searchable PDF