1. The problem is to understand what \( \ln \) means.
2. \( \ln \) stands for the natural logarithm, which is the logarithm to the base \( e \), where \( e \approx 2.71828 \).
3. The natural logarithm \( \ln(x) \) answers the question: "To what power must we raise \( e \) to get \( x \)?" In other words, \( \ln(x) = y \) means \( e^y = x \).
4. Important rules for \( \ln \):
- \( \ln(1) = 0 \) because \( e^0 = 1 \).
- \( \ln(e) = 1 \) because \( e^1 = e \).
- \( \ln(ab) = \ln(a) + \ln(b) \).
- \( \ln\left(\frac{a}{b}\right) = \ln(a) - \ln(b) \).
- \( \ln(a^r) = r \ln(a) \).
5. \( \ln \) is defined only for positive real numbers \( x > 0 \).
Final answer: \( \ln(x) \) is the natural logarithm, the power to which \( e \) must be raised to get \( x \).
Natural Logarithm Ecc319
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