"Why is e used in exponential growth functions? Now I'm aware that e^x is its own derivative, which makes it convenient to use in calculus. However, I have a question about this function: Intuitively, an exponential growth function could be written as a∗(1+k)t, where a is the initial amount, k is the growth rate and t is the time. However, it can also be rewritten as a∗ekt, same thing, but with Euler's number added to it. In what way are these both the same? They yield the same answer. Why not 2, or 4, or 10? I know that one would need to change the growth constant if using one of those bases, the one I called k, but how come one doesn't need to change it when it's in base e?"

Ayanna Goodman

Ayanna Goodman

Answered question

2022-11-20

Why is e used in exponential growth functions?
Now I'm aware that e x is its own derivative, which makes it convenient to use in calculus. However, I have a question about this function:
Intuitively, an exponential growth function could be written as a ( 1 + k ) t , where a is the initial amount, k is the growth rate and t is the time.
However, it can also be rewritten as a e k t , same thing, but with Euler's number added to it.
In what way are these both the same? They yield the same answer. Why not 2, or 4, or 10? I know that one would need to change the growth constant if using one of those bases, the one I called k, but how come one doesn't need to change it when it's in base e?

Answer & Explanation

yen1291kp6

yen1291kp6

Beginner2022-11-21Added 12 answers

The two k's in your formula will be different in order to make the two the same. Let's go with a simple concept in exponential growth:
Doubling time. As a concrete example, say we have a population that doubles every 4 units of time (Let's say days), so t is measured in days. Then it is pretty clear that the population at any given time is given by
P ( t ) = P 0 2 t 4
where P 0 is the initial population. In your non-e based formulation, this would be
P ( t ) = P 0 ( 2 1 4 ) t = P 0 ( 1 + ( 2 1 4 1 ) ) t
thus making your growth rate k in this version 2 1 4 1 Not very intuitive or easy to work with.
Changing it to base e just takes writing 2 as e ln 2 and using exponent laws:
P ( t ) = P 0 2 t 4 = P o e ln 2 t 4 = P 0 e ln 2 4 t
This is the standard version of k we would use for this problem k = ln 2 4 . So you see you can write it either way, you just need to change how you define k.
Using e is natural because we use these functions in differential equations all the time so using any other base would require constant change of bases. Finding k is easy, you just replace 4 with whatever the doubling time is in units of time. For exponential decay, you do the exact same but make it negative (because ln ( 1 2 ) = ln 2

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