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You are starting a new job and are told that your pay will be $3 on the first day. Each day after that, your pay will double until you reach the amount of $96. Starting from the first day, on what day will you reach $96?

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Answer: day six. A=3, b=2, t=0 to t=5, covering 6 days. $3, $6, $12, $24, $48, $96.


Explanation:


96 = 3*32 = 3*2^5 = Ab^t,\\\text{ with }A=3, b=2,\text{ and }t=5. A is the starting amount at t=0. b is the base, two because the amount doubles each day. b would be 3 if it tripled every day. t is the final day number, counting from zero.



A=3,b=2,t=0,Ab^t=3*2^0=3


A=3,b=2,t=1,Ab^t=3*2^1=6


A=3,b=2,t=2,Ab^t=3*2^2=12


A=3,b=2,t=3,Ab^t=3*2^3=24


A=3,b=2,t=4,Ab^t=3*2^4=48


A=3,b=2,t=5,Ab^t=3*2^0=96


We can also do this with units included.

Obviously the unit for A is dollars, and t is in days. But what is the unit for b?


Well, the amount doubles once _per day_. So try b = 2 per day = 2/day. That doesn't work. The correct value for b including units is


b=2^\left(\frac{1}{\text{day}}\right).

So if you wanted to express time in weeks while still doubling once per day, you would multiply by a value equivalent to one,
\frac{7\,\text{day}}{\text{week}}, and cancel units:


b=2^{\left(\frac{1}{\text{day}}\frac{7\,\text{day}}{\text{week}}\right)}=2^{\left(\frac{7}{\text{week}}\right)}=(2^7)^{\left(\frac{1}{\text{week}}\right)}=128^{\left(\frac{1}{\text{week}}\right)}.



A=\$3, b=2^\left(\frac{1}{\text{day}}\right), t=5\,\text{day},\\Ab^t=\$3\big\left(2^\left(\frac{1}{\text{day}}\right)\big\right)^{5\,\text{day}}=\$3\,2^5=\$96







User James Roper
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