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Mathematics 23 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Check my answer? Natural logarithm?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I got D

OpenStudy (anonymous):

correct for the first one. anymore?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@cherry18 could you explain how?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Because if you plug in the numbers it is reallly easy.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Plug in the information and go from there. In is inside parentheses

OpenStudy (freckles):

power rule then quotient rule

OpenStudy (freckles):

\[a \ln(x)=\ln(a^x) \text{ is power rule } \\ \text{ and } \\ \ln(r)-\ln(k)=\ln(\frac{r}{k}) \text{ is quotient rule }\]

OpenStudy (freckles):

the answer you got can be found by applying those two rules for log

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@freckles so is my answer right?

OpenStudy (freckles):

yes the answer you got can be found applying the two rules I mentioned for log for example: 4*log(x)-log(y) = log(x^4)-log(y) (this was by power rule) = log(x^4/y) (this was by quotient rule)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

thanks

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