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Lucille Cummings

Lucille Cummings

Answered question

2022-06-23

e ln ( 2 ) = 2 but ln ( 2 ) = ln 2 + i π. How does this work?
I'm messing with exponential growth functions. I noticed that I can write
y ( t ) = y ( 0 ) α t as
y ( t ) = y ( 0 ) e ln ( α ) t
(and then I can go ahead and replace ln ( α ) with λ.)
But how do I handle when the α in ln ( α ) is negative? WolframAlpha simply evaluates
e ln ( 2 ) as 2
but how do I get avoid the whole negative number issue?
WolframAlpha also calls log the natural logarithm, which is confusing. :/

Answer & Explanation

Christina Ward

Christina Ward

Beginner2022-06-24Added 19 answers

You can write any non negative number as an e-power as you did. In case the number is negative, keep the negative outside, so -e^ln(2) The composition of inverse functions is the identity function x, only on their defined domains, so for lnx that means x>0
Hailie Blevins

Hailie Blevins

Beginner2022-06-25Added 8 answers

With Euler's identity, e i θ = cos θ + sin θ . This is just a nice identity, proven to work for complex numbers. Any complex number can be written then as :
where r is its modulus.
Now take ln of that:
ln z = ln ( r e i θ ) = ln r + ln e i θ = ln r + i θ
Now, because e i θ = e i ( θ + 2 k π ) , we have in general,
ln z = ln r + i ( θ + 2 k π )

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