Hello! I'd really appreciate it if someone helped me solve this logarithm! It was my first class but the professor only showed the more simple versions :)​

Hello Id really appreciate it if someone helped me solve this logarithm It was my first class but the professor only showed the more simple versions class=


Answer :

Answer:

  (1/3)log(5) +(4/3)log(x) +log(y)

Step-by-step explanation:

You want the expanded form of the expression log(∛5·x^4·y^3).

Rules of logarithms

The applicable rules of logarithms are ...

  log(ab) = log(a) + log(b)

  log(a^b) = b·log(a)

In addition to these, you need to know that a root is a fractional power: the cube root is the 1/3 power. Of course, the rules of powers tell you ...

  (a^b)^c = a^(bc)

Application

You can express the root as a fractional power before or after taking logs. Either way, you get the same result.

Before

  [tex]\log\left(\sqrt[3]{5\cdot x^4y^3}\right)=\log\left(5^{\frac{1}{3}}\cdot x^{\frac{4}{3}}y^{\frac{3}{3}}\right)=\boxed{\dfrac{1}{3}\log(5)+\dfrac{4}{3}\log(x)+\log(y)}[/tex]

After

  [tex]\log\left(\sqrt[3]{5\cdot x^4y^3}\right)=\dfrac{1}{3}\log\left(5}\cdot x^{4}y^{3}}\right)=\dfrac{1}{3}\left(\log(5)+4\log(x)+3\log(y)\right)\\\\=\boxed{\dfrac{1}{3}\log(5)+\dfrac{4}{3}\log(x)+\log(y)}[/tex]

__

Additional comment

Working a more complex problem is like working a simple problem, except it has more parts and may require the use of the rules more times. It may be tedious to keep track of all the parts, but it is not difficult.