Am I right in thinking that #ln(-6)# is undefined ?
3 Answers
Explanation:
#"the log function is not defined for negative values"#
#"the graph of ln should confirm this for you"#
graph{lnx [-10, 10, -5, 5]}
It depends...
Explanation:
As a real valued function of real numbers the function
Therefore it has a well defined inverse function
This real valued logarithm is not defined for any real number in
However,
As such, it is a many to one function from
Since it is many to one, the complex valued logarithm
#{ x+yi : x in RR, y in (-pi, pi] }#
If
#ln x = ln (-x) + pi i#
So, for example:
#ln(-6) = ln(6) + pi i#
In general:
#ln(r(cos theta + i sin theta)) = ln r + theta i" "# for#theta in (-pi, pi]#
Yes
Explanation:
Say you have the following expression:
This directly translates, by the definition of the natural log, to