Exponential Growth & Decay
The ideas of compound interest and depreciation can be applied to other (non-money) situations, such as increasing or decreasing populations.
What is exponential growth?
- When a quantity grows exponentially it is increasing from an original amount, P, by r % each year for n years
- Some questions use a different timescale, such as each day, or each minute
- Real-life examples of exponential growth include population increases, bacterial growth and the number of people infected by a virus
- The same formula from compound interest is used
- Final amount of the quantity is
- Substitute values of P, r and n from the question into the formula to find the final amount
What is exponential decay?
- When a quantity exponentially decays it is decreasing from an original amount, P, by r % each year for n years
- Some questions use a different timescale, such as each day, or each minute
- Real-life examples of exponential decay include the temperature of hot water cooling down, the value of a car decreasing over time and radioactive decay (how radioactive a substance is over time)
- The same formula from compound interest is used, but with +r replaced by -r
- Final amount of the quantity is
- Substitute values of P, r and n from the question into the formula to find the final amount
How do I use the exponential growth & decay formula?
- To find a final amount, substitute the values of P, r and n (from the question) into the formula
- If the final amount is given in the question, F, set the whole formula equal to this final amount
- Some questions then ask to find P, r or n
- To find P or r, rearrange the formula to make P or r the subject (for r, one of the steps involves taking an nth root)
- To find n, use trial and improvement (test different whole-number values for n until both sides of the equation balance)
Examiner Tip
- Remember, r is a percentage not a decimal
- For example, an increase of 25% means r = 25, not 0.25
- Look out for how the question wants you to give your final answer
- It may want the final amount to the nearest thousand
- If finding n, your answer should be a whole number
Worked example
(a) An island has a population of 25 000 people. The population increases exponentially by 4% every year. Find the population after 13 years, giving your answer to the nearest hundred.
The question says “increases exponentially” so use
Substitute P = 25 000, r = 4 and n = 13 into the formula
Work out this value on your calculator
41626.83…
Round this value to the nearest hundred
41 600 people
(b) The temperature of a cup of coffee exponentially decays from 60°C by r % each hour. After 3 hours, the temperature is 18°C.
Write down an equation in terms of r.
The question says “exponentially decays” so use
Substitute P = 60 and n = 3 into the formula
The final value is 18, so set the whole formula equal to 18
This is now an equation in terms of r