
Logarithmic inequalities involve expressions containing logarithms and require careful attention to:
domain restrictions
properties of logarithmic functions
monotonic behavior of logarithms
Because logarithmic functions are strictly increasing or decreasing (depending on the base), they allow inequalities to be solved systematically, but errors in domain handling are common.
For $$f(x)=\log_{a}x$$:
Domain: x>0
If a>1:
$$\log_{a}x$$ is increasing
If 0<a<1:
$$\log_{a}x$$ is decreasing
This behavior determines whether an inequality sign is preserved or reversed.
Before solving any logarithmic inequality:
The argument of every logarithm must be positive.
Examples:
$$\log(x-2)>1 \Rightarrow x > 2$$
$$\ln(3x+1)\le2 \Rightarrow x > -\frac{1}{3}$$
Domain restrictions must be applied before and after solving.
Example:
$$\log_2(x-1)>3$$
Step 1: Domain
$$x-1>0 \rightarrow x>1$$
Step 2: Rewrite exponentially
$$x-1>2^3 \rightarrow x>9$$
Final solution:
x>9
Example:
$$\log_{\frac{1}{2}}(x+4)<1$$
Because the base is between 0 and 1, the function is decreasing, so the inequality reverses:
$$x+4>\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^1 \rightarrow x>-\frac{7}{2}$$
Also apply domain:
$$x>-4$$
Final solution:
$$x>-\frac{7}{2}$$
Example:
$$\log(x+2)-\log(x-1)\ge1$$
Step 1: Domain
$$x+2>0 , x-1>0 \rightarrow x>1$$
Step 2: Combine using log rules
$$\log\left(\frac{x+2}{x-1}\right)\ge1$$
Step 3: Rewrite exponentially
$$\frac{x+2}{x-1}\ge10^1$$
Step 4: Solve rational inequality
$$x+2\ge10(x-1) \rightarrow x\le\frac{12}{9}=\frac{4}{3}$$
Step 5: Apply domain
$$1<x\le\frac{4}{3}$$
When bases differ, use change of base to rewrite:
$$\frac{\ln(x-1)}{\ln2}>3$$
Since ln2>0, the inequality direction remains unchanged.
Ignoring domain restrictions
Forgetting to reverse inequality when 0<a<1
Including extraneous solutions
Misapplying logarithm laws
Solving logarithmic inequalities like equations
Students should be able to:
justify inequality direction using monotonicity
apply logarithm laws correctly
solve and interpret solutions using interval notation
explain reasoning verbally or in writing
check solutions against domain restrictions
Logarithmic inequalities require:
Careful domain analysis
Understanding of logarithm behavior
Correct use of exponential equivalence
Verification of solutions
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