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Solve each equation. Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
Here is a pattern showing a trapezoid decomposed into similar trapezoids at each step.
In a lab, a colony of 100 thousand bacteria is placed on a petri dish. The population grows exponentially, tripling every hour.
Complete the tables.
| -1 | 0 | 1 | 5 | ||||||||
| 4 | 16 | 256 | 1,024 |
| 1 | 5 | 125 | 625 | 3,125 |
Be prepared to explain how you found the missing values.
Sometimes we know the value of an exponential expression but we don’t know the exponent that produces that value.
For example, suppose the population of a town was 1 thousand. Since then, the population has doubled every decade and is currently at 32 thousand. How many decades has it been since the population was 1 thousand?
If we say that is the number of decades since the population was 1 thousand, then , or just , represents the population, in thousands, after decades. To answer the question, we need to find the exponent in . We can reason that since , it has been 5 decades since the population was 1 thousand people.
When did the town have 250 people? Assuming that the doubling started before the population was measured to be 1 thousand, we can write: , or . We know that , so the exponent has a value of -2. The population was 250 two decades before it was 1,000.
But it may not always be so straightforward to calculate. For example, it is harder to tell the value of in or in . In upcoming lessons, we’ll learn more ways to find unknown exponents.