How do you identify equations as exponential growth, exponential decay, linear growth or linear decay #M(t)=8(2)^(1/6t)#?

1 Answer
Jun 3, 2015

A linear (decay or growth) has the variable 'in line" with the other terms as in:
#M(t)=at+c#
The constant #a# determines whether it is a decay (#a<0#) or growth (#a>0#).
For example #M(t)=4t+7# where #a=4>0# is a linear growth.

An exponential has the variable up on the "first floor" as in:
#M(t)=ka^(bt)# where #k,a,b# are all constants (with #k>0#).
The constant #b# determines whether it is a decay (#b<0#) or growth (#b>0#).
In your case you have #M(t)=8*(2^(1/6t))# so that it is an exponential (#t# on the first floor) and #b=1/6>0# is an exponential growth.

Graphically:
graph{8(2^(x/6)) [-25.66, 25.66, -12.83, 12.82]}