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39. The difference between simple and compound interest on Rs. 500 for 3 years in yearly rate of interest is Rs. 2.432. What is the rate of interest ? ​

User Sooglejay
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9514 1404 393

Answer:

4%

Explanation:

The multiplier for computing simple interest over a 3-year period is ...

I = Prt . . . . . interest on principal P at rate r for t years

I/P = rt = 3r

The multiplier for computing compound interest over a 3-year period is ...

A = P(1 +r)^t . . . . amount with interest

A/P -1 = (1 +r)^3 -1 . . . . multiplier for computing interest only

Then the multiplier for the difference in amounts of interest is ...

((1 +r)^3 -1) -3r = (1 +3r +3r^2 +r^3) -1 -3r = r^2(3 +r)

This means we need to solve the cubic ...

r^2(3 +r) = 2.432/500

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This can be solved a variety of ways. Perhaps my favorite is a graphical solution. For that, we would rewrite the equation to the form ...

f(x) = x^2(3 +x) -0.004864

so the solution is found where f(x) = 0. The graph shows the solution to be ...

x = 0.04

The rate of interest is 0.04 = 4%.

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Additional comment

Using the above f(x) to develop a Newton's Method iterator, we find it to be ...

x' = (x²(2x +3) +0.004864)/(3x(x +2))

This needs a starting value, so we need an initial clue as to the approximate interest rate.

That can be offered by rearranging the cubic we first developed:

r = √(0.004864/(r +3))

Starting with r=0, this gives r ≈ 0.0402. At this point, we can either use this equation as an iterator, or use the Newton's method iterator above. Both will give an interest rate accurate to 4 or 5 decimal places in one iteration.

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You may be aware from the development above that the polynomial that must be solved will have a degree equal to the number of years over which interest is computed. That is, solving the same question for a 10-year period would involve finding the root of a 10th-degree polynomial.

39. The difference between simple and compound interest on Rs. 500 for 3 years in-example-1
User Achyut
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