Logarithmic × logarithmic

Log-log
graph paper

Both axes logarithmic. Built for power-law relationships, frequency response analysis, and any data spanning multiple orders of magnitude on both variables.

ΔxΔyy = x^1.5 → straighton log-log paper1101001100

About log-log paper

Both axes are logarithmic

Log-log graph paper (also called logarithmic paper or full-log paper) has both the horizontal and vertical axes on logarithmic scales. On each axis, equal distances represent equal ratios — the space from 1 to 10 equals the space from 10 to 100 equals the space from 100 to 1,000.

The key property: any power-law relationship of the form y = axⁿ becomes a perfectly straight line on log-log paper. The slope of that line equals the exponent n, which is a fundamental physical or statistical constant in many disciplines.

Log-log paper is the standard tool for identifying and quantifying power laws in data — a task that is otherwise very difficult to do by visual inspection on ordinary graph paper.

The log-log test: If data forms a straight line on log-log paper, the relationship is a power law (y = axⁿ). The slope of the line equals the exponent n.

Log-log paper cannot display zero or negative values — the logarithm of zero is undefined. Both variables must be strictly positive.

vs semi-logLog-logSemi-log
AxesBoth logarithmicOne linear, one log
Straight line meansPower law y = axⁿExponential y = a·bˣ
Slope equalsExponent nLog of growth rate
ExampleKepler's lawBacterial growth

Applications

What is log-log paper used for?

Physics — scaling laws

Physical scaling laws (how heat transfer, drag force, or structural strength scale with size) are power laws. Kepler's third law (T² ∝ r³) and Stefan-Boltzmann law both appear as straight lines on log-log paper.

Kepler's lawHeat transferDrag

Engineering — impedance plots

Impedance vs. frequency plots where both gain and frequency span many decades use log-log axes. True impedance magnitude plots require log-log scales where both axes cover multiple orders of magnitude.

ImpedanceGainFilter design

Ecology — species-area law

The species-area relationship (S = cA𝑧) is a power law. Ecologists use log-log paper to determine the exponent z — a fundamental constant in island biogeography, typically between 0.2 and 0.35.

Species richnessIsland biogeography

Seismology — Gutenberg-Richter

The frequency of earthquakes of different magnitudes follows the Gutenberg-Richter power law. Seismologists plot earthquake frequency vs. magnitude on log-log scales to determine the b-value of a region.

Earthquake frequencyb-value

Materials — fatigue and fracture

Paris's law for fatigue crack growth (da/dN = C·ΔK𝒟) is a power law. Log-log paper is used to plot crack growth rate vs. stress intensity factor range to determine the Paris exponent m.

Paris's lawCrack growthFatigue

Astronomy — luminosity relations

The mass-luminosity relationship in stellar astrophysics (L ∝ M𝐺) and the period-luminosity relation in Cepheid variables are power laws naturally represented on log-log axes.

LuminosityMass-luminosityCepheids

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is log-log graph paper?+
Log-log paper has both the x-axis and y-axis on a logarithmic scale. Equal distances represent equal ratios. Any power-law relationship (y = axⁿ) appears as a straight line with slope equal to the exponent n.
What is the difference between log-log and semi-log paper?+
Semi-log has one linear axis and one logarithmic axis — exponential functions (y = a·bˣ) plot as straight lines. Log-log has both axes logarithmic — power-law functions (y = axⁿ) plot as straight lines. Use semi-log for exponential data, log-log for power-law data.
Can log-log paper show negative numbers or zero?+
No. The logarithm of zero is undefined and negative numbers have no real logarithm. Both variables must be strictly positive. If your data includes zero or negative values, use Cartesian or semi-log paper instead.
How do I read the slope of a line on log-log paper?+
Pick two points (x₁,y₁) and (x₂,y₂). The slope n = log(y₂/y₁) ÷ log(x₂/x₁). For example: if y doubles when x increases fourfold, n = log(2)/log(4) = 0.5 — a square-root relationship.
Is logarithmic graph paper the same as log-log paper?+
The terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but strictly: 'logarithmic graph paper' can mean any paper with at least one log axis (including semi-log). 'Log-log paper' specifically means both axes are logarithmic. CustomGraph provides both formats on separate pages.

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