Logarithmic derivative

Logarithmic derivative

In mathematics, specifically in calculus and complex analysis, the logarithmic derivative of a function f is defined by the formula

 \frac{f'}{f} \!

where f ′ is the derivative of f.

When f is a function f(x) of a real variable x, and takes real, strictly positive values, this is equal to the derivative of ln(f); or, the derivative of the natural logarithm of f. This follows directly from the chain rule.

Contents

Basic properties

Many properties of the real logarithm also apply to the logarithmic derivative, even when the function does not take values in the positive reals. For example, since the logarithm of a product is the sum of the logarithms of the factors, we have

 (\log uv)' = (\log u + \log v)' = (\log u)' + (\log v)' .\!

So for positive-real-valued functions, the logarithmic derivative of a product is the sum of the logarithmic derivatives of the factors. But we can also use the Leibniz law for the derivative of a product to get

 \frac{(uv)'}{uv} = \frac{u'v + uv'}{uv} = \frac{u'}{u} + \frac{v'}{v} .\!

Thus, it's true for any function that the logarithmic derivative of a product is the sum of the logarithmic derivatives of the factors (when they are defined).

Similarly (in fact this is a consequence), the logarithmic derivative of the reciprocal of a function is the negation of the logarithmic derivative of the function:

 \frac{(1/u)'}{1/u} = \frac{-u'/u^{2}}{1/u} = -\frac{u'}{u} ,\!

just as the logarithm of the reciprocal of a positive real number is the negation of the logarithm of the number.

More generally, the logarithmic derivative of a quotient is the difference of the logarithmic derivatives of the dividend and the divisor:

 \frac{(u/v)'}{u/v} = \frac{(u'v - uv')/v^{2}}{u/v} = \frac{u'}{u} - \frac{v'}{v} ,\!

just as the logarithm of a quotient is the difference of the logarithms of the dividend and the divisor.

Generalising in another direction, the logarithmic derivative of a power (with constant real exponent) is the product of the exponent and the logarithmic derivative of the base:

 \frac{(u^{k})'}{u^{k}} = \frac {ku^{k-1}u'}{u^{k}} = k \frac{u'}{u} ,\!

just as the logarithm of a power is the product of the exponent and the logarithm of the base.

In summary, both derivatives and logarithms have a product rule, a reciprocal rule, a quotient rule, and a power rule (compare the list of logarithmic identities); each pair of rules is related through the logarithmic derivative.

Computing ordinary derivatives using logarithmic derivatives

Logarithmic derivatives can simplify the computation of derivatives requiring the product rule. The procedure is as follows: Suppose that ƒ(x) = u(x)v(x) and that we wish to compute ƒ'(x). Instead of computing it directly, we compute its logarithmic derivative. That is, we compute:

\frac{f'}{f} = \frac{u'}{u} + \frac{v'}{v}.

Multiplying through by ƒ computes ƒ':

f' = f\left(\frac{u'}{u} + \frac{v'}{v}\right).

This technique is most useful when ƒ is a product of a large number of factors. This technique makes it possible to compute ƒ' by computing the logarithmic derivative of each factor, summing, and multiplying by ƒ.

Integrating factors

The logarithmic derivative idea is closely connected to the integrating factor method for first-order differential equations. In operator terms, write

D = d/dx

and let M denote the operator of multiplication by some given function G(x). Then

M−1DM

can be written (by the product rule) as

D + M*

where M* now denotes the multiplication operator by the logarithmic derivative

G′/G.

In practice we are given an operator such as

D + F = L

and wish to solve equations

L(h) = f

for the function h, given f. This then reduces to solving

G′/G = F

which has as solution

exp(∫F)

with any indefinite integral of F.

Complex analysis

The formula as given can be applied more widely; for example if f(z) is a meromorphic function, it makes sense at all complex values of z at which f has neither a zero nor a pole. Further, at a zero or a pole the logarithmic derivative behaves in a way that is easily analysed in terms of the particular case

zn

with n an integer, n ≠ 0. The logarithmic derivative is then

n/z;

and one can draw the general conclusion that for f meromorphic, the singularities of the logarithmic derivative of f are all simple poles, with residue n from a zero of order n, residue −n from a pole of order n. See argument principle. This information is often exploited in contour integration.

The multiplicative group

Behind the use of the logarithmic derivative lie two basic facts about GL1, that is, the multiplicative group of real numbers or other field. The differential operator

 X\frac{d}{dX}

is invariant under 'translation' (replacing X by aX for a constant). And the differential form

dX/X

is likewise invariant. For functions F into GL1, the formula

dF/F

is therefore a pullback of the invariant form.

Examples


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Logarithmic differentiation — Logarithmic derivative is a separate article. Topics in Calculus Fundamental theorem Limits of functions Continuity Mean value theorem Differential calculus  Derivative Change of variables Implicit differentiation …   Wikipedia

  • Logarithmic form — Any formula written in terms of logarithms may be said to be in logarithmic form.Logarithmic differential formsIn contexts including complex manifolds and algebraic geometry, a logarithmic differential form is a 1 form that, locally at least, can …   Wikipedia

  • Logarithmic spiral — A logarithmic spiral, equiangular spiral or growth spiral is a special kind of spiral curve which often appears in nature. The logarithmic spiral was first described by Descartes and later extensively investigated by Jakob Bernoulli, who called… …   Wikipedia

  • Derivative — This article is an overview of the term as used in calculus. For a less technical overview of the subject, see Differential calculus. For other uses, see Derivative (disambiguation) …   Wikipedia

  • Logarithmic mean — In mathematics, the logarithmic mean is a function of two numbers which is equal to their difference divided by the logarithm of their quotient. In symbols::egin{matrix}M {mbox{lm(x,y) =lim {(xi,eta) o(x,y)} frac{eta xi}{ln eta ln xi}… …   Wikipedia

  • Logarithm — The graph of the logarithm to base 2 crosses the x axis (horizontal axis) at 1 and passes through the points with coordinates (2, 1), (4, 2), and (8, 3) …   Wikipedia

  • Differentiation rules — Topics in Calculus Fundamental theorem Limits of functions Continuity Mean value theorem Differential calculus  Derivative Change of variables Implicit differentiation Taylor s theorem Related rates …   Wikipedia

  • List of mathematics articles (L) — NOTOC L L (complexity) L BFGS L² cohomology L function L game L notation L system L theory L Analyse des Infiniment Petits pour l Intelligence des Lignes Courbes L Hôpital s rule L(R) La Géométrie Labeled graph Labelled enumeration theorem Lack… …   Wikipedia

  • List of calculus topics — This is a list of calculus topics.Note: the ordering of topics in sections is a suggestion to students.Before calculus (precalculus)*Graph of a function *Linear function *Secant *Slope *Tangent *Concavity *Finite difference *Radian *Factorial… …   Wikipedia

  • Mathematical induction — can be informally illustrated by reference to the sequential effect of falling dominoes. Mathematical induction is a method of mathematical proof typically used to establish that a given statement is true of all natural numbers (positive… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”