Exponents & Log Calculator
Calculate Exponents & Logarithms
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How It Works
Select exponent or logarithm mode, enter your values, and get instant results. Our calculator uses precise mathematical formulas for accuracy in academic and professional applications.
Common Uses
Calculate compound interest, scientific notation, pH values, earthquake magnitudes, sound decibels, and exponential growth/decay with this versatile mathematical tool.
Always Accessible
Works completely in your browser - no data sent to servers. Use it anytime, anywhere with full privacy protection for homework, research, or professional calculations.
Mathematical Formulas
Basic Exponent Rule
Negative Exponent Rule
Fractional Exponent Rule
Logarithm Definition
Change of Base Formula
Power Rule for Logarithms
Step-by-Step Examples
Compound Interest (Exponent)
Earthquake Magnitude (Logarithm)
Sound Intensity (Combined)
Understanding Exponents & Logarithms
Exponents and logarithms are fundamental mathematical operations used across science, engineering, finance, and data analysis. Understanding these concepts helps solve problems involving growth, scaling, and measurement across different orders of magnitude.
What are Exponents?
Exponents represent repeated multiplication. The expression aⁿ means multiply a by itself n times. Exponents are essential for calculating compound interest, population growth, radioactive decay, and scientific notation for very large or small numbers.
What are Logarithms?
Logarithms are the inverse operation of exponents. If aˣ = b, then logₐ(b) = x. Logarithms compress large ranges into manageable scales, making them ideal for comparing quantities that span multiple orders of magnitude, like earthquake energies or sound intensities.
Real-World Applications
- Finance: Compound interest calculations use exponents to determine investment growth over time
- Chemistry: pH scale uses base-10 logarithms to measure acidity: pH = -log₁₀[H⁺]
- Geology: Richter scale uses base-10 logarithms for earthquake magnitude comparisons
- Acoustics: Decibel scale uses base-10 logarithms for sound intensity measurements
- Computer Science: Algorithm complexity (Big O notation) often involves logarithmic terms
Practical Example: Compound Interest Calculation
Imagine investing $1,000 at 5% annual interest compounded annually for 10 years.
Formula: A = P(1 + r)^t
- P = $1,000 (principal)
- r = 0.05 (5% interest rate)
- t = 10 years
Calculation: 1.05^10 = 1.628894626777
Result: $1,000 × 1.62889 = $1,628.89
If you want to know how long it takes to double your money at 5% interest:
Formula: t = log(2) / log(1.05)
Calculation: log₁₀(2) ≈ 0.3010, log₁₀(1.05) ≈ 0.02119
Result: 0.3010 ÷ 0.02119 ≈ 14.2 years