Solving Exponential Growth Homework: Find Water to Eliminate 50% Salt

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Homework Statement


Water is pumped into a tank. Volume V, is kept constant by continuos flow. The amount of salt S, depends on the amount of water that ahs been pumped in, call it X.

ds/dx = -S/V

Find the amount of water needed to eliminate 50% of the salt. Take v AS 10,000 gallons


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



We know that volume V is kept constant by continuos flow. d/dv ?
im througly confused...
I understand that exponential growth has the traditional formula: Ce^kt
but how can we ues it with this question?

helps appreciated.
 
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lovemake1 said:

Homework Statement


Water is pumped into a tank. Volume V, is kept constant by continuos flow. The amount of salt S, depends on the amount of water that ahs been pumped in, call it X.

ds/dx = -S/V

Find the amount of water needed to eliminate 50% of the salt. Take v AS 10,000 gallons


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



We know that volume V is kept constant by continuos flow. d/dv ?
im througly confused...
So am I! There is no differentiation with respect to V (please do not use both small and capital letters to mean the same thing). V is a constant- replace it with the 10000 you are given.

I understand that exponential growth has the traditional formula: Ce^kt
but how can we ues it with this question?

helps appreciated.
I take it this is a "differential equations" course. You would be expected to recognize that you can write the original equation as
\frac{dS}{S}= -\frac{dx}{10000}
and integrate:
ln(S)= -\frac{x}{10000}+ C
so that
S(x)= e^C e^{-\frac{x}{10000}}= C&#039; e^{-\frac{x}{V}[/itex]<br /> where C&amp;#039;= e^C. That is the &quot;Ce^{kt}&quot; you have, except that your variable is x, the amount of water that has flowed through, not time.<br /> <br /> Now solve the equation S(x)= (1/2)S(0).
 
Ah I see the light !
But the line after "so that",
Shouldn't it be e^lns = e^-x/v + c ?
just confused to what C is
 
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