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On day 0, you have 1 penny. Every day, you double.
A radioactive substance is decaying. There is currently 100 of the substance.
In both of the problems above, part (d) required you to invert the normal exponential function. Instead of going from time to amount , it asked you to go from amount to time . (This is what an inverse function does—it goes the other way—remember?)
So let’s go ahead and talk formally about an inverse exponential function. Remember that an inverse function goes backward . If turns a 3 into an 8, then must turn an 8 into a 3.
So, fill in the following table (on the left) with a bunch of and values for the mysterious inverse function of . Pick -values that will make for easy -values. See if you can find a few -values that make be 0 or negative numbers!
On the right, fill in and values for the inverse function of .
Inverse of | |
8 | 3 |
Inverse of | |
Now, let’s see if we can get a bit of a handle on this type of function.
In some ways, it’s like a square root. is the inverse of . When you see you are really seeing a mathematical question: “What number, squared, gives me ?”
Now, we have the inverse of (which is quite different from of course). But this new function is also a question: see if you can figure out what it is. That is, try to write a question that will reliably get me from the left-hand column to the right-hand column in the first table above.
Do the same for the second table above.
Now, come up with a word problem of your own, similar to the first two in this exercise, but related to compound interest.
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