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6.4 Applications of Differential Equations
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I. Exponential Growth and Decay A.) Law of Exponential Change - Any situation where a quantity (y) whose rate of growth or decay at any time t is directly proportional to the amount of the quantity present at that time t. B.) Examples- Population growth, Radioactive decay, Compounding continuously
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II. Procedure 1.) Set up the function. 2.) Solve the differential equation. 3.) Find all relevant constants. (Use Table) 4.) Solve the problem. 5.) Graph the equations.
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III. General Case Exponential Growth/Decay Model -
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IV. Newton’s Law of Cooling Any situation where the rate of change of an object’s temperature (T) is proportional to the difference between its temperature T and the temperature T S of the surrounding medium, assuming T S stays fairly constant.
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V. Examples See Handout
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1.) According to U.N. data, the world population in the beginning of 1975 was 4 billion and growing at a rate of 1.2% per year. Assuming an exponential growth model, estimate the population in the year 2015. Start from your initial differential equation with this problem and use calculus to solve it.
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Solution
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2.) A ½ - life of a certain radioactive element is 45 years. How much of 25 grams remains after 105 years? You may use the general case exponential function to solve this problem.
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Solution
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3.) 3.) P(t) represents the number of tigers in a population at time t ≥ 0. P(t) is increasing at a rate directly proportional to 800 – P where k is the constant of proportionality, P(0) = 400, and P(2) = 500.Find P(t), and find when the population is 700 tigers.
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Solution
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