mark on Nostr: you use a logarithmic scale when dealing with exponential growth or decay, as with ...
you use a logarithmic scale when dealing with exponential growth or decay, as with biological populations or network adoption where each new node has its own branch of nodes and so on
it helps you see and understand the rate of change more accurately than a linear scale
decibels, which is a measure of sound intensity, are also logarithmic because the human perception of loudness is logarithmic
meaning a doubling of sound power is perceived as a constant increase in loudness, not a doubling
it doesn't make sense to plot this on a linear scale
it helps you see and understand the rate of change more accurately than a linear scale
decibels, which is a measure of sound intensity, are also logarithmic because the human perception of loudness is logarithmic
meaning a doubling of sound power is perceived as a constant increase in loudness, not a doubling
it doesn't make sense to plot this on a linear scale