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" The logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of its factors. "
Logarithmic and Trigonometric Tables - Page 44
edited by - 1914 - 97 pages
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Elements of algebra, compiled from Garnier's French translation of L. Euler ...

Charles Tayler - 1824 - 350 pages
...shall resume pur former equation, viz. log. be = log. b + log. c, which comprehends the property that the logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of the factors. First, as log. 2 = x, and log. 10 = 1, we have log. 20 = ^+1 log. 200 = ^ + 2 log. 2000...
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Elements of Algebra

William Smyth - Algebra - 1830 - 278 pages
...by member, we have yy' y" = a*+x'+x" whence. log y y'y"=* + x' + x"= log y + log y'+ logy" That is, the logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of the factors of this product. If then a multiplication be proposed, we take from a table of logarithms...
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Elements of Algebra: Tr. from the French of M. Bourdon, for the ..., Volume 1

Bourdon (M., Louis Pierre Marie) - Algebra - 1831 - 446 pages
...the rule for the exponents (No. 180), we find yyy"y"' .... ^a'+*+J"+»"+' • • • Hence thai is, the logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of the factors of this product. Secondly. Suppose it is required to divide y by y', and let x and x' represent...
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Elements of Algebra

William Smyth - Algebra - 1836 - 288 pages
...= a^ + *' + «" whence log y y' y" ~= x -\- x' -f x" = log y -f~ log y' -\- log y' . That is, //i« logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of llie factors of this product. If then a mulplication be proposed, we take from a table of logarithms...
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Treatise on the elements of algebra

James Bryce - Algebra - 1837 - 322 pages
...known, its logarithm in another system may be found. 192. Schol. i. It follows, from Art. 35, 40, that the logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of its factors; and that the logarithm of a quotient is equal to the difference of the logarithms of the dividend and...
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The Elements of Algebra Preliminary to the Differential Calculus: And Fit ...

Augustus De Morgan - Algebra - 1837 - 308 pages
...Logarithm between 0 and 1 1 and 2 2 and 3 Sec. 0 and —1 — 1 and —2 — 2 and —3 &c. THEOREM V. The logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of the factors. Let a be the base, and p, q, and r, the logarithms of P, Q, and K. Then P = a" Q = a"...
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The Elements of Algebra Preliminary to the Differential Calculus: And Fit ...

Augustus De Morgan - Algebra - 1837 - 308 pages
...number, lie between am and a" ; then x, the logarithm, lies between m and n (see page 89). THEOREM V. The logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of the factors. Let a be the base, and;?, q, and r, the logarithms of P, Q, and 11. Then P = a" Q = a'...
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A Treatise on Trigonometry, and on Trigonometrical Tables and Logarithms ...

John Hymers - Logarithms - 1841 - 244 pages
...logep ; and as this process may be continued to any number of factor», we conclude, generally, that the logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of its factors. 8. The logarithm of a quotient is equal to the logarithm of the dividend diminished by that of the...
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Elements of Arithmetic and Algebra: For the Use of the Royal Military College

William Scott - Algebra - 1844 - 568 pages
...logarithms of yy'.y" ...; -„ y~, V~respcctively; whence, as has been already proved (Art. 208 — 211), the logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of the factors of that product ; the logarithm of a quotient is equal to the excess of the logarithm of...
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Solutions to the questions of the general examination at Easter, 1848 ...

J. Goodall, W. Hammond - 1848 - 390 pages
...quantity less than 1. The properties of logarithms of greatest practical utility in calculation are—1st. The logarithm of a product is equal to the sum of the logarithms of its factors; so that to multiply numbers we have only to add their logarithms and the number corresponding to the...
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