This could be a basic question. But I would like to know steps I should follow to calculate $\log_2\, 0.667$.
EDIT
In an answer I found it says $(0.038 \log_2 0.038) = -0.181$. How this calculation works?
Is it $0.038 \log(0.038) / \log 2$ ?
This could be a basic question. But I would like to know steps I should follow to calculate $\log_2\, 0.667$.
EDIT
In an answer I found it says $(0.038 \log_2 0.038) = -0.181$. How this calculation works?
Is it $0.038 \log(0.038) / \log 2$ ?
For a rough approximation notice that
$0.667 \approx 2/3$
so $\log_2\left( 2/3\right) = \log_2\left( 2\right) - \log_2\left( 3\right) = 1 - \log_2\left( 3\right)$
From here one can use a change of bases. Like in the answers above
$ \log 0.667 \approx 1 - \frac{\ln 3}{\ln 2}$
(For the wise kids we know that $\ln 2 \approx 0.69$ and $\ln 3 \approx 1.1$ so )
$ \log 0.667 \approx 1 - \frac{\ln 3}{\ln 2} \approx 1 - \frac{1.1}{0.69} = -\frac{41}{69} \approx -0.59 $
Which is quite a good approximation
That
$\log_a(x) = y$
means by definition that
$a^y = x$
So to find $\log_2(0.667)$ you would (using the definition) need to solve the equation $2^y = 0.667$. We can solve that equation by "taking" $\log = \log_{10}$ on both sides, so we get
$\log(2^y) = \log(0.667) \Rightarrow$
$y\log(2) = \log(0.667) \Rightarrow$
$\log_2(0.667) = y = \frac{\log(0.667)}{\log(2)}$
To evaluate this expression you would need a calculator. Note you could also use the natural logarithm ($\ln = \log_{e}$, $e = 2.718281...$) and get
$\log_2(0.667) = \frac{\ln(0.667)}{\ln(2)}$