Yes.
Yes.
An exponential growth function actually describes a quantity that increases exponentially over time, with the rate of increase proportional to the current value of the quantity, resulting in rapid growth. The formula for an exponential growth function is y = a * (1 + r)^t, where 'a' is the initial quantity, 'r' is the growth rate, and 't' is time.
The exponential function describes a quantity that grows or decays at a constant proportional rate. It is typically written as f(x) = a^x, where 'a' is the base and 'x' is the exponent. For example, if we have f(x) = 2^x, each time x increases by 1, the function doubles, showing exponential growth.
what symbol best describes the asymptote of an exponential function of the form F(x)=bx
Yuo cannot include a graphical illustration here. Take a look at the Wikipedia, under "exponential function" and "logistic function". Basically, the exponential function increases faster and faster over time. The logistics function initially increases similarly to an exponential function, but then eventually flattens out, tending toward a horizontal asymptote.
The linear function increases by the same number each step. The exponential function increases more each step. (1,1),(2,2),(3,3) etc (1,1).(2,4),(3,9),(4,16), etc see how the second one increases a lot?
f(x) = bX is not an exponential function so the question makes no sense.
It is an exponential function.
True
base
A __________ function takes the exponential function's output and returns the exponential function's input.
exponential decay