While powers and logarithms of any base can be used in modeling, the two most common bases are
and
In science and mathematics, the base
is often preferred. We can use laws of exponents and laws of logarithms to change any base to base
Given a model with the form
change it to the form
Rewrite
as
Use the power rule of logarithms to rewrite y as
Note that
and
in the equation
Changing to base
e
Change the function
so that this same function is written in the form
is the amount of carbon-14 when the plant or animal died
is the amount of carbon-14 remaining today
is the age of the fossil in years
Doubling time formula
If
the doubling time is
Newton’s Law of Cooling
where
is the ambient temperature,
and
is the continuous rate of cooling.
Key concepts
The basic exponential function is
If
we have exponential growth; if
we have exponential decay.
We can also write this formula in terms of continuous growth as
where
is the starting value. If
is positive, then we have exponential growth when
and exponential decay when
See
[link] .
In general, we solve problems involving exponential growth or decay in two steps. First, we set up a model and use the model to find the parameters. Then we use the formula with these parameters to predict growth and decay. See
[link] .
We can find the age,
of an organic artifact by measuring the amount,
of carbon-14 remaining in the artifact and using the formula
to solve for
See
[link] .
Given a substance’s doubling time or half-time, we can find a function that represents its exponential growth or decay. See
[link] .
We can use Newton’s Law of Cooling to find how long it will take for a cooling object to reach a desired temperature, or to find what temperature an object will be after a given time. See
[link] .
We can use logistic growth functions to model real-world situations where the rate of growth changes over time, such as population growth, spread of disease, and spread of rumors. See
[link] .
We can use real-world data gathered over time to observe trends. Knowledge of linear, exponential, logarithmic, and logistic graphs help us to develop models that best fit our data. See
[link] .
Any exponential function with the form
can be rewritten as an equivalent exponential function with the form
where
See
[link] .
Astronomy (from Ancient Greek ἀστρονομία (astronomía) 'science that studies the laws of the stars') is a natural science that studies celestial objects and phenomena. It uses mathematics, physics, and chemistry in order to explain their origin and evolution.
Rafael
vjuvu
Elgoog
what is big bang theory?
Rosemary
what type of activity astronomer do?
Rosemary
No
Richard
the big bang theory is a theory which states that all matter was compressed together in one place the matter got so unstable it exploded releasing All its contents in the form of hydrogen
according to the theory of astronomers why the moon is always appear in an elliptical orbit?
Gatjuol
hi !!! I am new in astronomy....
I have so many questions in mind ....
all of scientists of the word they just give opinion only.
but they never think true or false ...
i respect all of them...
I believes whole universe depending
on true ...থিউরি
Govinda
hello
Jackson
hi
Elyana
we're all stars and galaxies a part of sun. how can science prove thx with respect old ancient times picture or books..or anything with respect to present time .but we r a part of that universe
there many theory to born universe but what is the reality of big bang theory to born universe
Asmit
what is the exact value of π?
Nagalakshmi
by big bang
universal
there are many theories regarding this it's on you believe any theory that you think is true ex. eternal inflation theory, oscillation model theory, multiple universe theory the big bang theory etc.
Aarya
I think after Big Bang!
Michele
from where on earth could u observe all the stars during the during the course of an year
is that so. the question was in the end of this chapter
Karuna
in theory, you could see them all from the equator (though over the course of a year, not at pne time). stars are measured in "declination", which is how far N or S of the equator (90* to -90*). Polaris is the North star, and is ALMOST 90* (+89*).
So it would just barely creep over the horizon.
Christopher
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