wordswarm: free dictionary lookup
look up a word or phrase
My Projects: Payphone Project . USPS Mailbox Locator . Found Photos . "The Etude" Magazine . Discarded Umbrella Carcasses . My Receipts
Telephone Exchange Names . My Film Photography . Sepulchral Portraits . WanderLIC . Old Receipts . Sorabji.ME . Sorabji.com
Wordswarms From Years Past



Adjacent Words

common ivy
common jasmine
common juniper
common kingsnake
common knowledge
common laburnum
common lady's-slipper
common land
common law
Common lawyer
common lettuce
Common lewdness
common lilac
common limpet
common logarithm
common louse
Common lunar year
common lynx
common mackerel
common madia
common maidenhair
common mallow
common man
common marigold
Common Market
common matrimony vine
common measure
common meter
common milkwort
common mood

Full-text Search for "Common logarithms"
1930

Common logarithms definitions



submit to reddit

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

Logarithm Log"a*rithm (l[o^]g"[.a]*r[i^][th]'m), n. [Gr. lo`gos word, account, proportion + 'ariqmo`s number: cf. F. logarithme.] (Math.) One of a class of auxiliary numbers, devised by John Napier, of Merchiston, Scotland (1550-1617), to abridge arithmetical calculations, by the use of addition and subtraction in place of multiplication and division. Note: The relation of logarithms to common numbers is that of numbers in an arithmetical series to corresponding numbers in a geometrical series, so that sums and differences of the former indicate respectively products and quotients of the latter; thus, 0 1 2 3 4 Indices or logarithms 1 10 100 1000 10,000 Numbers in geometrical progression Hence, the logarithm of any given number is the exponent of a power to which another given invariable number, called the base, must be raised in order to produce that given number. Thus, let 10 be the base, then 2 is the logarithm of 100, because 10^2 = 100, and 3 is the logarithm of 1,000, because 10^3 = 1,000. Arithmetical complement of a logarithm, the difference between a logarithm and the number ten. Binary logarithms. See under Binary. Common logarithms, or Brigg's logarithms, logarithms of which the base is 10; -- so called from Henry Briggs, who invented them. Gauss's logarithms, tables of logarithms constructed for facilitating the operation of finding the logarithm of the sum of difference of two quantities from the logarithms of the quantities, one entry of those tables and two additions or subtractions answering the purpose of three entries of the common tables and one addition or subtraction. They were suggested by the celebrated German mathematician Karl Friedrich Gauss (died in 1855), and are of great service in many astronomical computations. Hyperbolic, or Napierian, logarithms





wordswarm.net: free dictionary lookup