How do you evaluate (log10x)2?

1 Answer
Aug 8, 2018

There's not much to say. If we are given a number, we can solve this. For example, if x=100,
(log10(100))2=22=4

We know the zero of this function is still x=1. We know that the domain of the function is x(0,). The range is obviously also [0,), since it's like x2 still.

We could imagine sketching from these properties alone. For low values, this blows up (since log of a number near 0 is a large negative). It is well known that log grows far more slowly than x, so we expect this to be similar to a log function with a little more life:
graph{log(x)^2 [-1, 20, -1, 2]}