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Question
the proof for the product property of logarithms requires simplifying the expression $\log_{b}(b^{x + y})$ to $x + y$. which property is used to justify this step? $b^{x} cdot b^{y} = b^{x + y}$ substitution $\log_{b}(b^{c}) = c$ commutative property
Brief Explanations
To simplify \( \log_b(b^{x + y}) \) to \( x + y \), we use the property of logarithms that states \( \log_b(b^c)=c \). Let's analyze each option:
- The first option \( b^x \cdot b^y = b^{x + y} \) is the product property of exponents, not related to simplifying the logarithm here.
- Substitution is a general method but not a specific property for this logarithm simplification.
- The property \( \log_b(b^c)=c \) directly applies here. If we let \( c=x + y \), then \( \log_b(b^{x + y})=x + y \) by this property.
- The commutative property deals with the order of addition or multiplication (e.g., \( a + b=b + a \) or \( ab = ba \)) and is not relevant to this logarithm simplification.
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\( \boldsymbol{\log_b(b^c) = c} \) (the option with this property)