https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logarithm
From ages ago, maybe wrong:
Wiki writes a logarithmic function is an inverse *operation*, not the inverse
function of an exponential equation. Isn’t an inverse exponential function
obtained just by adding a minus to the exponent?
jd
From: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On ;
Behalf Of William Claybaugh
Sent: dinsdag 6 september 2016 2:50
To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [AR] Re: Issues with operating at low chamber pressure
Norman:
When I was taught the exponential functions I was taught that the inverse
exponential was a part of that class. That is, logarithmic functions are
correctly generally referred to as "exponential" or--perhaps somewhat more
accurately--as "inverse exponentials".
I deduce that you disagree and instead think that logarithmic functions are not
part of the class of exponential functions.
That is not my understanding.
Bill
On Monday, September 5, 2016, Norman Yarvin <yarvin@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, Sep 05, 2016 at 07:10:08AM -0400, William Claybaugh wrote:
Norm:
A logarithm is an exponential function.