I require help with a bit of maths

Soldato
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How do i get from:

e^0.003t - e^0.002t = 0.08

to:

e^0.001t - 1 = 0.08e^-0.002t

I have a feeling it's blindingly obvious, but im just not seeing it! Over to you, OcUK :D
 
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Simple rule is


A^x . A^y = A^(x+y)

All they have done is extracted e^0.002t from each term.


e^0.003t / e^0.002t = e^(0.003t-0.002t) = e^0.001t
 
Meeark said:
Simple rule is


A^x . A^y = A^(x+y)

All they have done is extracted e^0.002t from each term.


e^0.003t / e^0.002t = e^(0.003t-0.002t) = e^0.001t

Think you mean A^xy = (A^x)^y for this problem
 
Yes sorry i made a mistake and changed it slightly. Thanks for the help though. I think the equation i typed originally was an intermediate step.. or something. 4 hours of maths makes me tired :o
 
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Johanson said:
All i had to do was divide by e^0.002t, durrrr :p
Thats ok for the LHS, but how does 0.08 devided by e^0.002t come to 0.08^-0.002t?

Or is it just another one of those random rules with exponentials? ("because it just does")
 
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You know what, i may be totally wrong on that bit :confused: but i thought that a/x^b = ax^-b ?

In fact yes that's correct, which explains how i got the RHS.
 
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Please help, my brain has stopped working

I need to differentiate the following:

y = e^2/x + e^x

I know the chain, product and quotient rules, but this simple question is taking forever and getting me nowhere.

Again, i imagine the answer to be blindingly obvious. Could someone point me in the right direction please?
 
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Johanson said:
How do i get from:

e^0.003t - e^0.002t = 0.08

to:

e^0.001t - 1 = 0.08e^-0.002t

I have a feeling it's blindingly obvious

Yeah, if you're a rocket scientist.

What the hell is it all about?
 
Hows it cheating? Its not like im sat in exam right now, i just need to answer this to move onto the next part of the question. Its not homework either, just revision. Same as asking a tutor.. so, be my tutor :)

Enfield said:
Yeah, if you're a rocket scientist.

What the hell is it all about?

2 months ago i would have said the same thing :p
 
Johanson said:
I need to differentiate the following:

y = e^2/x + e^x

I know the chain, product and quotient rules, but this simple question is taking forever and getting me nowhere.

Again, i imagine the answer to be blindingly obvious. Could someone point me in the right direction please?

e^x differentiates as e^x. Rearrange the first term to be e^2.(x^-1), where e^2 is a constant and you're left with a very simple differentiation.
 
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