How do I find the multiplier for a rate of exponential decay?

1 Answer
Jan 12, 2015

This depends on what you already know. I'll do two examples:

First to know :
Decay follows the formula: #N=B*g^t#
Where #N#=new situation after #t# periods. #B#=start value
#g#="growth" factor and must be #<1# to be called decay

Simple :
You know that decay is 5% per period. So after each period the value is only 95% of the period before. You "growth" (decay) factor is then #95//100=0.95#

Bit more complicated:
A radio-active object has a half-life of 4 days, what is the decay-factor (per day)?

#N=B*g^t# fill in what you know:
#0.5=1*g^4->g^4=0.5->g=root 4 0.5~~0.841#

Which means it will lose almost 16% of its activity per day (check!)

Extra :
Instead of using #root t x# you may use #x^(1//t)# on your calculator
You key in x^(1/t) with the right numbers, e.g. 0.5^(1/4)