What is the natural log of -0.2877?

1 Answer
Jun 26, 2016

If you are talking about lnln as a Real valued function of Real numbers then ln(-0.2877)ln(0.2877) is undefined.

The principal Complex natural logarithm is:

ln(-0.2877) = ln(0.2877)+pii ~~ -1.2458+piiln(0.2877)=ln(0.2877)+πi1.2458+πi

Explanation:

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Real natural logarithm

The function e^xex with domain (-oo, oo)(,) and range (0, oo)(0,) is one to one. So it has a well defined inverse function ln(x)ln(x) with domain (0, oo)(0,) and range (-oo, oo)(,)

Since negative numbers (and zero) are not in the range of e^xex, they are not in the domain of the inverse Real logarithm function ln(x)ln(x). So ln(-0.2877)ln(0.2877) is undefined.

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Complex natural logarithm

The function e^zez has domain CC and range CC "\" { 0 }

It is many to one, e.g. e^0 = 1 = e^(2pii), so it does not have a well defined inverse function. However, if we restrict the domain to { z in CC : -pi < Im(z) <= pi } then it has a well defined inverse:

ln(z) = ln abs(z) + Arg(z)i

In particular, for negative Real numbers, we have:

ln(x) = ln(-x) + pii

Hence:

ln(-0.2877) = ln(0.2877)+pii ~~ -1.2458+pii