Log–log plot: Difference between revisions

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Applications: File:2010- Decreasing renewable energy costs versus deployment.svg A log-log plot condensing information that spans more than one order of magnitude along both axes]]
Jlazovskis (talk | contribs)
m x and y coordinates were reversed
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which means that
<math display="block"> F(x) = \mathrm{constant}\cdot x^m. </math>
In other words, ''F'' is proportional to ''x'' to the power of the slope of the straight line of its log–log graph. Specifically, a straight line on a log–log plot containing points (''Fx''<sub>0</sub>,&nbsp;''xF''<sub>0</sub>) and (''Fx''<sub>1</sub>,&nbsp;''xF''<sub>1</sub>) will have the function:
<math display="block"> F(x) = {F_0}\left(\frac{x}{x_0} \right)^\frac {\log (F_1/F_0)}{\log(x_1/x_0)}, </math>
Of course, the inverse is true too: any function of the form