What does the slope of a semilog plot indicate?

  • Thread starter Thread starter ShayanJ
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Plot Slope
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on understanding the significance of the slope in a semilogarithmic plot, particularly in the context of an RC circuit experiment involving capacitor charging and discharging. The slope calculated from the semilog plot is related to the time constant (RC) of the circuit, with the instructor indicating that the proof provided is incomplete. Participants clarify that when plotting y = ae^{bx} on semilog paper, the slope corresponds to the coefficient b, not directly to the logarithm of y. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding the relationship between the plotted values and the logarithmic scale. Overall, the slope in a semilog plot indicates the rate of exponential change in the data being analyzed.
ShayanJ
Science Advisor
Insights Author
Messages
2,801
Reaction score
606
We had an experiment of charging and dicharging a capacitor in a RC circuit.Our instructor asked us to plot our data in a semilogarithmic paper.Then told us the formula of calculating the slope of such a curve.It was:
\frac {[the vertical distance between two points measured by a ruler]*2.3}{the distance of two successive ones]*[the difference of the two ponit's independent variables]}
then asked us two prove that what is this slope I did the following:
\frac{log \frac{i_{2}}{i_{1}} *ln{10}}{\Delta t}=\frac{ln{i_{2}}ln{i_{1}}}{\Delta t}
And we have ln{i} = ln{\frac{\Epsilon}{R}}-\frac{t}{RC}
So we get that the slope is -1/RC.
But the instructor says this proof is incomplete.What's the problem?Can you tell what quantity does this slope idicate?
thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Could it be the bit where you measure with a ruler?
Why is the delta-y of the slope 2.3 times the ruler distance?

Other than that you seem to have related the slope of ln(i) vs t properly.
Unless he wants you to explicitly find the derivative?

Tips:
you can write text inside the tex box by using \text{}
you can write the natural logarithm as \ln(i_1) etc.
The upper-case epsilon in just E
 
Ok.forget my first post's mess.
I just want to know if I find the slope of the straight line in a semilog paper,what quantity does it mean.For example if I plot the formula
y=a e^{b x}
On a semilog paper and get a straight line,what will be the slope of that line?
thanks
 
Last edited:
When you plot y=ae^{bx} on semi-log paper, the values on the vertical axis are not \ln(y) are they?

You are actually plotting values of y, and adjusting the spacing to account for the logarithm.

The slope of ln(y) vs x will be b... which you know.

You have not been told you are wrong exactly, but that your explanation is incomplete. - what you are missing is the relationship between the semi-log paper and this equation. (That and maybe making the relationship between the derivative and the analytic equation for a line explicit.)

Remember: this is an exercise you have been set: I am not supposed to do it for you. Ergo: I cannot just give you the answer. I have to try to guide you to the answer, from the information you give me. If you want to know exactly what your instructor means, you'll have to ask him.
 
Shyan said:
Ok.forget my first post's mess.
I just want to know if I find the slope of the straight line in a semilog paper,what quantity does it mean.For example if I plot the formula
y=a e^{b x}
On a semilog paper and get a straight line,what will be the slope of that line?
thanks
You could plot a few curves on your semilog paper, e.g., y=e0.3x, y=e0.6x and y=2e0.3x and see how these turn out.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
Back
Top