IB Maths AI HLExponentials & LogsPaper 1 & 2log laws~6 min read
Laws of Logarithms
The laws of logarithms turn products into sums, quotients into differences and powers into products. They let you combine several logarithms into one — the key move for simplifying log expressions and solving logarithmic equations.
📘 What you need to know
Product law: loga(xy) = logax + logay.
Quotient law: loga(x/y) = logax − logay.
Power law: loga(xm) = m logax.
The three laws are in the formula booklet; they hold only for a, x, y > 0.
You cannot take the log of zero or a negative number — check solutions against this.
The laws of logarithms
Because a logarithm is an exponent, the index laws carry over directly. Each log law steps an operation down a level: multiplying becomes adding, dividing becomes subtracting, and raising to a power becomes multiplying.
The three laws lower every operation by one level. Read right to left, they instead combine separate logs into a single logarithm.
The three laws of logarithms
logaxy = logax + logaylogaxy = logax − logaylogaxm = m logaxthese three are in the formula booklet — valid for a, x, y > 0
Useful results
A few special values follow straight from the laws. They are not in the formula booklet, so learn them — they short-cut a great many questions.
Results worth memorising
loga1 = 0 · logaa = 1 · logaak = kalogax = x · ln ex = x · eln x = xlogs and powers of the same base are inverse operations — they undo each other
Solving equations and the domain
To solve a logarithmic equation, use the laws to write each side as a single logarithm. If you reach log(…) = log(…), the insides must be equal; if you reach log(…) = a number, rewrite it as a power.
A logarithm is only defined for a positive input: logax needs x > 0. So an equation like loga(x − 5) requires x > 5.
Always check: substitute each solution back into the original equation and reject any that take the log of zero or a negative number. Also note loga(x + y) ≠ logax + logay.
🧠Recipe — simplifying or solving with log laws
Power law first: bring any coefficient up as a power, m log x = log xm.
Product law: combine a sum of logs into one, log x + log y = log xy.
Quotient law: combine a difference into one, log x − log y = log(x/y).
Equate or unpack: if log(…) = log(…), set the insides equal; if log(…) = number, rewrite as a power.
Check the domain: reject any solution that takes a log of zero or a negative number.
Worked examples
WE 1
Combining into a single log
Write log 6 + log 5 − log 3 as a single logarithm.
product law on the sumlog 6 + log 5 = log(6 × 5) = log 30quotient law on the differencelog 30 − log 3 = log(30 ÷ 3)= log 10work left to right — sums combine with ×, differences with ÷.
WE 2
Using the power law
Express 3 log 2 + log 5 as a single logarithm.
power law on the coefficient 33 log 2 = log 23 = log 8product law to combinelog 8 + log 5 = log(8 × 5)= log 40deal with the coefficient first — turn it into a power before combining.
WE 3
Expanding a single log
Write logax3yz in terms of logax, logay and logaz.
quotient law splits the fraction= loga(x3y) − logazproduct law splits x3y= logax3 + logay − logazpower law on logax33 logax + logay − logazthe same laws in reverse — break one log into several.
WE 4
Useful results, no calculator
Evaluate, without a calculator: (a) log55, (b) log21, (c) log337, (d) ln e4.
apply the useful results directly(a) logaa = 1 ⇒ log55 = 1(b) loga1 = 0 ⇒ log21 = 0(c) logaak = k ⇒ log337 = 7(d) ln ex = x ⇒ ln e4 = 4(a) 1 · (b) 0 · (c) 7 · (d) 4when the base matches the number, the log just reads off the power.
WE 5
Solving a logarithmic equation
Solve log2x + log2(x − 2) = 3.
product law combines the left sidelog2(x(x − 2)) = 3rewrite log = 3 as a power of 2x(x − 2) = 23 = 8x2 − 2x − 8 = 0 ⇒ (x − 4)(x + 2) = 0domain needs x > 2 — reject x = −2x = 4log2(x − 2) is undefined for x ≤ 2, so −2 cannot be a solution.
WE 6
Full question: simplify, then solve
(a) Write 2 log 3 + log 2 in the form log k, where k ∈ ℤ. (b) Hence solve 2 log 3 + log 2 = log(2x).
(a) power law: 2 log 3 = log 32 = log 9log 9 + log 2 = log(9 × 2) = log 18(b) so log 18 = log(2x)both sides are a single log ⇒ 2x = 18(a) k = 18 · (b) x = 9once each side is one log, equate the insides — then check x = 9 keeps 2x > 0. ✓
💡 Top tips
Combining logs into one is the key move — sum → ×, difference → ÷.
Clear coefficients with the power law before using the product or quotient law.
Spot the useful results — logaak = k and alogax = x save real time.
If log(…) = log(…) with the same base, just equate the insides.
Always check solutions — a value that makes any log input ≤ 0 must be rejected.
âš Common mistakes
Thinking loga(x + y) = logax + logay — the product law needs xy, not x + y.
Forgetting the power law — 2 log 3 is log 9, not log 6.
Keeping an invalid solution that makes a log input zero or negative.
Misreading logaak — the answer is the exponent k, not ak.
Mixing bases — the laws only combine logs that share the same base.
That completes Exponentials & Logs. The index laws, logarithms and the log laws all describe one relationship from different angles — and together they unlock exponential models, where logarithms are the tool for solving for an unknown power.
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