What are the practical applications of growth and decay functions?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the practical applications of growth and decay functions, particularly in the context of everyday life and academic work. Participants explore the definitions and implications of these functions, specifically exponential growth and decay.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants question the original poster's definitions of "growth and decay" functions and their relevance to everyday life. There is a request for clarification on specific applications and examples of these functions in practical scenarios.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants providing insights into potential applications, such as banking interest calculations and idealized models in physics and chemistry. Some participants express skepticism about the clarity and specificity of the original question, suggesting that more focused inquiries would be beneficial.

Contextual Notes

There is a mention of the original poster's need for examples for a college math report, indicating a context of academic inquiry. Some participants note the ill-defined nature of the question, which may hinder productive discussion.

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Does anyone know how to use the growth and decay functions? How would any of these be useful in everyday life?
 
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What do YOU mean with "growth and decay" functions?
 
Are you referring to exponential growth and decay ?
 
Also, what do you mean by "everyday life" ? My everyday life involves doing physics, so yes, such functions are useful in my everyday life.
 
Gokul43201 said:
Are you referring to exponential growth and decay ?
Yeah. Sorry for not specifying.
 
Is this homework ? I can't imagine that someone would ask you a question like this !

Not only is it ill-defined, it serve any purpose to have someone answer such a question.

If you have a more specific question, ask it.
 
Gokul43201 said:
Is this homework ? I can't imagine that someone would ask you a question like this !

Not only is it ill-defined, it serve any purpose to have someone answer such a question.

If you have a more specific question, ask it.
This is the Homework helpzone, isn't it? Here is the question: Can you think of a growth or decay function that you encounter in your work or in your personal life? It's for a report I'm doing for College Math. I don't really have anything to go on at the moment.
 
Try to look into how banks calculate interests on your money.
Is that "useful" enough?
 
Maybe if I had a better understanding how the functions work, it'd be more helpful.
 
  • #10
Simply put, an exponential growth is seen by anything that grows are a steady rate, say, 5% per year, for example.

(Yes, it might seem counter-intuitive that steady and exponential growth are the same thing.)

Exponenetial decay is seen in chemical reactions, radioactivity, electronic circuits, etc. Look these up to see how they apply.

Here are the formulas that describe these :

Growth : [itex]A = A_0 r^{(t/T)} + B_0[/itex]

Decay : [itex]A = A_0 r^{-(t/T)} + B_0[/itex]
 
  • #11
In ideal problems (such as uninhibited population growth) can be modeled by exponential functions as well as interest, the decay of atoms per mol of a substance at a certain time or the concentration of a solution that contains an initial concentration but has flowing water through it. They're all pretty ideal though just to stress that.
 

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