\({\log _a}a = 1\) (since \({a^1} = a\)) so \({\log _7}7 = 1\) \({\log _a}1 = 0\) (since \({a^0} = 1\)) so \({\log _{20}}1 = 0\) \({\log _a}p + {\log _a}q = {\log _a ...
This video explains a challenging exponential equation step by step, showing how to simplify expressions, apply exponent rules, and solve systematically without skipping key logic. Perfect for ...
Timothy Li is a consultant, accountant, and finance manager with an MBA from USC and over 15 years of corporate finance experience. Timothy has helped provide CEOs and CFOs with deep-dive analytics, ...
Exponential integrators represent an innovative class of numerical methods designed to address the challenges posed by stiff differential equations. By incorporating the matrix exponential to treat ...
Remember one of the laws of logs: \(n{\log _a}x = {\log _a}{x^2}\) Another one of the laws are used here: \({\log _a}x + {\log _a}y = {\log _a}xy\) ...