Iterated logarithm

For the theorem in probability theory, see Law of the iterated logarithm.

In computer science, the iterated logarithm of n, written log* n (usually read "log star"), is the number of times the logarithm function must be iteratively applied before the result is less than or equal to 1. The simplest formal definition is the result of this recursive function:

On the positive real numbers, the continuous super-logarithm (inverse tetration) is essentially equivalent:

but on the negative real numbers, log-star is 0, whereas for positive x, so the two functions differ for negative arguments.

Figure 1. Demonstrating log* 4 = 2 (using base e)

In computer science, lg* is often used to indicate the binary iterated logarithm, which iterates the binary logarithm instead. The iterated logarithm accepts any positive real number and yields an integer. Graphically, it can be understood as the number of "zig-zags" needed in Figure 1 to reach the interval [0, 1] on the x-axis.

Mathematically, the iterated logarithm is well-defined not only for base 2 and base e, but for any base greater than .

Analysis of algorithms

The iterated logarithm is useful in analysis of algorithms and computational complexity, appearing in the time and space complexity bounds of some algorithms such as:

The iterated logarithm grows at an extremely slow rate, much slower than the logarithm itself. For all values of n relevant to counting the running times of algorithms implemented in practice (i.e., n  265536, which is far more than the estimated number of atoms in the known universe), the iterated logarithm with base 2 has a value no more than 5.

x lg* x
(−∞, 1] 0
(1, 2] 1
(2, 4] 2
(4, 16] 3
(16, 65536] 4
(65536, 265536] 5

Higher bases give smaller iterated logarithms. Indeed, the only function commonly used in complexity theory that grows more slowly is the inverse Ackermann function.

Other applications

The iterated logarithm is closely related to the generalized logarithm function used in symmetric level-index arithmetic. It is also proportional to the additive persistence of a number, the number of times one must replace the number by the sum of its digits before reaching its digital root.

Santhanam[6] shows that DTIME and NTIME are distinct up to

Notes

  1. Olivier Devillers, "Randomization yields simple O(n log* n) algorithms for difficult ω(n) problems.". International Journal of Computational Geometry & Applications 2:01 (1992), pp. 97–111.
  2. Noga Alon and Yossi Azar, "Finding an Approximate Maximum". SIAM Journal of Computing 18:2 (1989), pp. 258–267.
  3. Richard Cole and Uzi Vishkin: "Deterministic coin tossing with applications to optimal parallel list ranking", Information and Control 70:1(1986), pp. 32–53.
  4. Cormen, Thomas H.; Leiserson, Charles E.; Rivest, Ronald L. (1990). Introduction to Algorithms (1st ed.). MIT Press and McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-262-03141-8. Section 30.5.
  5. https://www.cs.princeton.edu/~rs/AlgsDS07/01UnionFind.pdf
  6. On Separators, Segregators and Time versus Space

References

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