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in this video tutorial weamp;#39;re gonna have a quick look at working with logs and we present a number of rules for working with logs and exponents in the book one of the most useful ones arguably is weamp;#39;re able to say that if a equals log b then b is therefore equal to 10 raised to the power of a and one of the places we come across logs most often in the book when weamp;#39;re considering the henderson hasselbach equation that says that ph equals pka plus log of a minus the base over concentration of h a the acid letamp;#39;s imagine uh weamp;#39;ve got we know that the ph of our solution is 7.38 this is an example we mentioned in the book and the pka equals 7.08 oops thereamp;#39;s our zero eight so we feed these numbers into the equation we can say seven point three eight equals 7.08 plus log of base over acid and we then subtract 7.08 from both sides so that it cancels out from here so you end up with 0.3 on this side which is 7.38 minus 7.08 equals log of a minus h