Question
The population of bacteria in a culture grows at a rate proportional to the number of bacteria present at time $t$. After 3 hours it is observed that 400 bacteria are present. After 10 hours2000 bacteria are present. What was the initial number of bacteria?
Step 1
This can be represented by the differential equation $\frac{dP}{dt} = kP$, where $P$ is the population at time $t$ and $k$ is the constant of proportionality. Show more…
Show all steps
Your feedback will help us improve your experience
Hast Aggarwal and 52 other Calculus 2 / BC educators are ready to help you.
Ask a new question
Labs
Want to see this concept in action?
Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.
Key Concepts
Recommended Videos
The population of bacteria in a culture grows at a rate proportional to the number of bacteria present at time t. After 3 hours it is observed that 400 bacteria are present. After 10 hours 2000 bacteria are present. What was the initial number of bacteria?
The population of bacteria in a culture grows at a rate proportional to the number present at time t. After 3 hours it was observed that 400 bacteria are present. After 10 hours 2000 bacteria are present. What was the initial number of bacteria?
The population of bacteria in a culture grows at a rate proportional to the number of bacteria present at time t. After 3 hours it is observed that 400 bacteria are present. After 10 hours 2000 bacteria are present. What was the initial number of bacteria? (Round your answer to the nearest integer.)
Transcript
18,000,000+
Students on Numerade
Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities
Watch the video solution with this free unlock.
EMAIL
PASSWORD