Inverse Funtions f ^-1 (y) and the Logarithm x = ln y

Instructor:
Prof. Gilbert Strang

Resources:
Summary with practice problems (PDF)

Free downloads:
Internet Archive (MP4 - 146MB)
iTunes U (MP4 - 79MB)

Professor Strang's Calculus textbook (1st edition, 1991) is freely available here.

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For the usual y = f(x), the input is x and the output is y.
For the INVERSE function x = f^-1(y), the input is y and the output is x.

If y equals x cubed, then x is the cube root of y : that is the inverse.

If y is the great function e^x, then x is the NATURAL LOGARITHM ln y.

Start at y, go to x = ln y, then back to y = e^(ln y).
So the LOGARITHM is the EXPONENT that produces y.
The logarithm of y = e^5 is ln y = 5. Logarithms grow very slowly.......