The natural logarithm is the inverse of the exponential function, which maps multiplication to addition; it is used to solve equations involving exponentials and to calculate compound interest. It can be defined for any positive real number and extended to all non-zero complex numbers. It is written as ln x, loge x, or log x with parentheses added for clarity.
Carnegie Mellon University
Spring 2012
This course explores the relationship between algebra and computation, focusing on algorithms used for symbolic computation and modern algebra concepts. Subjects covered include proving combinatorial identities, Gröbner bases, symbolic integration, and experimental mathematics. Prerequisites suggest this is a mid-level course.
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