I have spent quite a bit of time plotting Exel graphs from the results obtained in testing soil and rock samples with my magnetic viscosity meter. Data can be plotted in linear, semi-log and log-log form, which is fine. The first plot attached is semi-log on which a pure single exponential object, such as a thin gold ring, would appear as a straight line plot. Rocks and magnetically mineralised soil will have a power law decay which requires a log-log plot to show a straight line. In semi-log it appears as in the first attachment.

This shows four plots and that the exponents differ. The red trace is a piece of the ironstone that gave Kingswood trouble when ground balancing his VMH3CS detector. This has an x^-1.133 decay. Soil from Red Hill, Virginia, has a x^-1.037 decay, as shown by the top purple trace. The other two plots are material from other area.
The problem I have is that when the graph is switched to log-log, I lose the 10uS X axis spacing that I have in the linear and semi-log plots which show the time spacing of the sample pulse. All I can get is the 10, 100, 1000 etc, axes, but without the minor axes that identify the sample points.

This is a second sample of Red Hill soil which gives x^-1.041 as do three other samples. All samples in these tests are 10gm weight so that I can also compare them for magnetic susceptibility in a different instrument.
Does anyone know how to get these minor axes on the X axis? I have scoured several books on Exel without success.
Eric.
This shows four plots and that the exponents differ. The red trace is a piece of the ironstone that gave Kingswood trouble when ground balancing his VMH3CS detector. This has an x^-1.133 decay. Soil from Red Hill, Virginia, has a x^-1.037 decay, as shown by the top purple trace. The other two plots are material from other area.
The problem I have is that when the graph is switched to log-log, I lose the 10uS X axis spacing that I have in the linear and semi-log plots which show the time spacing of the sample pulse. All I can get is the 10, 100, 1000 etc, axes, but without the minor axes that identify the sample points.
This is a second sample of Red Hill soil which gives x^-1.041 as do three other samples. All samples in these tests are 10gm weight so that I can also compare them for magnetic susceptibility in a different instrument.
Does anyone know how to get these minor axes on the X axis? I have scoured several books on Exel without success.
Eric.
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