How to represent 1/log(x) as integral of exponentials on domain [1, infty)?

ecoanuncios7x

ecoanuncios7x

Answered question

2022-09-27

How to represent 1/log(x) as integral of exponentials on domain [ 1 , )?

Answer & Explanation

Alannah Hanson

Alannah Hanson

Beginner2022-09-28Added 11 answers

Not sure if this is what you're looking for, but you can do something like this: let x > a > 1 be fixed, then by the fundamental theorem of calculus we have
1 log x = 1 log a + a x ( 1 log t )   d t = 1 log a + a x 1 log 2 t 1 t   d t
Next we can introduce a substitution u = log ( log t ), equivalently e u = log t which further implies e u   d u = 1 t   d t. We then have
1 log x = 1 log a + log ( log a ) log ( log x ) 1 ( e u ) 2 e u   d u = 1 log a log ( log a ) log ( log x ) e u   d u

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