Revision as of 09:34, 3 October 2008 by Bell (Talk)

Think about the problem similar to the half-life problem, but instead of one half, we have 9/10.

$ A(t)=A_{0}(9/10)^t $

Then, solve for when $ A(t)/A_{0} $ is 1/5.

Sorry for the confusion I caused in class about this problem.

Your TA,

-Dat Tran

Here's another way to think about it. We assume that the oil $ A(t) $ satisfies the standard differential equation of decay that is proportional to the amount present at any given time:

$ \frac{dA}{dt}=-kA $

Then we know that $ A(t)=A_0e^{-kt} $. If 10% of the oil is gone after one year, then

$ A(1)=A_0e^{-k\cdot 1}=\frac{9}{10}A_0e^{-k} $,

and so $ e^{k}=\frac{9}{10} $.

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Abstract algebra continues the conceptual developments of linear algebra, on an even grander scale.

Dr. Paul Garrett