Page:The Construction of the Wonderful Canon of Logarithms.djvu/86

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62 REMARKS ON APPENDIX.

ber of quotients by the first, that is the number of places in the product less one, will be equal to the Logarithm of the second.

Number
of Places
1 0
1 2 1
1 4 2
2 16 4
3 256 8
4 1024 10
7 1048576 20
13 1099511627776 40
25 1208925819614 80
31 1267650600228 100
61 16069379676 200
121 25822496318 400
241 66680131608 800
302 107150835165 1000
603 114813014767 2000
1205 131820283599 4000
2409 17316587168 8000
3011 19950583591 10000
Here we see that if we assume the Logarithm of 10 to be 10, the number of places in the tenth power is 4, wherefore the logarithm of 2 will be 3 and something over. The number of places in the hundredth power is 31; in the thousandth, 302; in the ten thousandth, 3011; and generally the more products we take the more nearly do we approach the true Logarithm sought for. For when the products are few, the fraction adhering to
the