Suppose the population of cells is #N(t) = N_0(2)^(t/4)#, and #N_0 = 3#, where #t# is in hours, then how do you answer the following questions?

a) What is the effect of #N_0 = 3# on the graph of #N(t)#?

b) How many cells are there after 1 day?

c) What is the domain and range of this situation?

2 Answers
Apr 20, 2017

See below

Explanation:

a) Assuming #N_0=1#, the graph would look like this: graph{2^(1/2x) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

b) #N(24)=N_0xx2^(24/4)=64N_0#

c) The equation would become #N(t)=N_0 2^(t/2)# and the graph would be more compressed.

Apr 20, 2017

a) If the initial popluation is #3#, the function becomes:

#N(t) = 3(2)^(t/4)#

Which has a graph

graph{y = 3(2)^(x/4 [-14.24, 14.23, -7.12, 7.11]}

b) We have #t = 24#, therefore:

#N(24) = 3(2)^6 = 192#

There will be #192# cells after #24# hours.

c) The equation would become #N(t) = 3(2)^(t/2)#, which is to say that if #t = a# in the initial graph and #t = a# in the second graph, #N# will be larger in the second graph because there will be more bacteria since they reproduce more frequently.

In summary, the graph will be steeper, increasing at a quicker rate.

Here's the new graph:

graph{3(2)^(x/2) [-14.24, 14.23, -7.12, 7.11]}

d) Since time will always be positive, the domain will be #t >= 0#. The range for #N(t) = 3(2)^(t/4)# will be #N >= 3#, since the colony starts with #3# members and increases from there without bounds.

Hopefully this helps!