The Pi Product Symbol For Multiplying Numbers

in math •  8 years ago  (edited)


Featured Image

In an earlier post, I talked about adding numbers/quantities together with the sigma sum notation.

We had , be replaced by


In this post, the focus is on the multiplication case. Instead of having , you would use


The big Pi symbol above is used to represent a product of numbers.

The Pi Product Notation


Suppose you have the expression .

In terms of product notation, this can be represented as:


The starting number is when k = 2 which would be just 2. Then you increase the index variable k by one each time you get the next number. When k is 3 you have the next number as 3. Continue this process until you have the upper limit of k = 10.

(The above example is an example of an ascending factorial. You can start the index at k = 1 instead of k = 2.)

Variables With Subscripts Case

Consider the case where you multiply the following:


The subscripts keep increasing by 1. The above can be represented in product notation as:


I have used a different index variable which is j. (You could use other common letters like i, or k.)

A Few Algebra Applications


Exponent Laws

The following expression


can be expressed as . The n represents the number of twos in the product. In Pi product notation, the above can be represented as:

If you have something like , it can be expressed as


Logarithms

In this example, I use the natural logarithm where .

One property of logarithms is where the logarithm of a product is the sum of the logarithms with separate components.


The general case for logartihms would be as follows:



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