Easy way to compute logarithms without a calculator?

To evaluate $\log_8 128$, let $$\log_8 128 = x$$ Then by definition of the logarithm, $$8^x = 128$$ Since $8 = 2^3$ and $128 = 2^7$, we obtain \begin{align*} (2^3)^x & = 2^7\\ 2^{3x} & = 2^7 \end{align*} If two exponentials with the same base are equal, then their exponents must be equal. Hence, \begin{align*} 3x & = 7\\ x & = \frac{7}{3} \end{align*}

Check: If $x = \frac{7}{3}$, then $$8^x = 8^{\frac{7}{3}} = (8^{\frac{1}{3}})^7 = 2^7 = 128$$


Using $\log_xy=\dfrac{\log_ay}{\log_ax}$ and $\log(z^m)=m\log z$ where all the logarithms must remain defined unlike $\log_a1\ne\log_a(-1)^2$

$$\log_8{128}=\dfrac{\log_a(2^7)}{\log_a(2^3)}=\dfrac{7\log_a2}{3\log_a2}=?$$

Clearly, $\log_a2$ is non-zero finite for finite real $a>0,\ne1$

See Laws of Logarithms


As you've seen, it can be a bunch of work to actually calculate them by hand. So, in the context of "no calculator", I'd like to point out that the slide rule was made almost exactly for this type of calculation!

Tags:

Logarithms