Geometric Sequences & Exponential Functions (College Board AP® Precalculus): Revision Note

Roger B

Written by: Roger B

Reviewed by: Mark Curtis

Updated on

Geometric sequences & exponential functions

What is an exponential function?

  • An exponential function is a function of the form space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals a b to the power of x

    • where a is the initial value (the output when x = 0)

    • and b is the base

  • Key features:

    • The base b must satisfy b > 0 and b \neq 1

      • if b = 1, then space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals a, which is just a constant function

        • i.e. a linear function with a horizontal graph

    • The domain of an exponential function is all real numbers

    • If a > 0 and b > 1, the function demonstrates exponential growth

    • If a > 0 and 0 < b < 1, the function demonstrates exponential decay

Examiner Tips and Tricks

You should already have basic familiarity with exponential functions from your study prior to AP® Precalculus.

  • A geometric sequence of the form g subscript n equals g subscript 0 r to the power of n and an exponential function of the form space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals a b to the power of x have the same structure

  • Both can be expressed as

    • an initial value

    • with repeated multiplication by a constant ratio

Geometric sequence

Exponential function

Formula

g subscript n equals g subscript 0 r to the power of n

space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals a b to the power of x

Initial value

g subscript 0

a

Constant ratio

r (common ratio)

b (base)

  • In both cases

    • each time the input increases by 1

    • the output is multiplied by the same constant (r or b)

  • This means that the terms of a geometric sequence

    • are the same as the values of a corresponding exponential function evaluated at whole number inputs

    • E.g. the geometric sequence g_n = 5 \cdot 2^n gives the same output values as the exponential function space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals 5 times 2 to the power of x

      • but only at x = 0, 1, 2, 3, \ldots

How does the known-point form of an exponential function relate to the geometric sequence formula?

  • The geometric sequence formula based on a known term, g subscript n equals g subscript k r to the power of left parenthesis n minus k right parenthesis end exponent

    • has a direct parallel in the known-point form of an exponential function

  • An exponential function can be written in known-point form as space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals y subscript i r to the power of left parenthesis x minus x subscript i right parenthesis end exponent space

    • where (x_i, y_i) is a known point on the graph

    • and r is a known ratio

  • Compare these side by side:

Geometric sequence

Exponential function

Formula

g subscript n equals g subscript k r to the power of left parenthesis n minus k right parenthesis end exponent

space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals y subscript i r to the power of left parenthesis x minus x subscript i right parenthesis end exponent space

Known value

g_k (the kth term)

space y subscript i (the output at x subscript i)

Constant ratio

r

r

Difference from known input

n minus k

x minus x subscript i

  • Both say the same thing:

    • Start at a known output value

    • then multiply by the constant ratio raised to the power of how far the input is from the known input

  • This means you can construct an exponential function from two data points

    • using the same logic as finding the general term of a geometric sequence from two terms

Examiner Tips and Tricks

When constructing an exponential model from two data points, use the known-point form

  • find the ratio r from the ratio of the two output values

  • then write space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals y subscript i r to the power of left parenthesis x minus x subscript i right parenthesis end exponent space

How do the domains of an exponential function and a geometric sequence differ?

  • Although a geometric sequence and an exponential function can share the same formula

    • they have different domains

  • A geometric sequence is defined only for whole number inputs (n = 0, 1, 2, 3, \ldots)

    • The graph of a geometric sequence is a set of discrete points

  • An exponential function is defined for all real numbers

    • The graph of the corresponding exponential function is a smooth continuous curve

      • that passes through all of those points

      • and extends between and beyond them

Graph showing exponential growth of f(x) = 0.3 * 1.6^x with points marked on curve, x-axis as x or n, y-axis as y or a_n, labelled axes.
Graphs of an exponential function and the corresponding geometric sequence on the same set of axes
  • In many contextual problems, the geometric sequence captures values at discrete time steps (e.g. after each year)

    • while the exponential function extends the model to allow predictions at any input value (e.g. after 2.5 years)

Examiner Tips and Tricks

The exam frequently presents tables of data and asks you to determine the function type.

  • If you check the ratios between successive output values over equal-length input intervals and find they are constant

    • then the data is exponential

  • This is the same as recognizing a geometric pattern

Worked Example

A colony of bacteria is being studied. The number of bacteria, in thousands, is recorded at regular intervals. The table below shows the data.

Time (hours)

0

1

2

3

4

Bacteria (thousands)

8

12

18

27

40.5

(a) Show that the bacteria data can be modeled by an exponential function.

Answer:

Check the ratios between successive output values over equal-length input intervals

  • Each interval in the table has length 1 hour, so the intervals are all equal-length

\frac{12}{8} = 1.5

18 over 12 equals 1.5

27 over 18 equals 1.5

fraction numerator 40.5 over denominator 27 end fraction equals 1.5

The ratios are constant (all equal to 1.5), so the output values change proportionally. This means the data can be modeled by an exponential function.

(b) Write an exponential function B left parenthesis t right parenthesis that models the number of bacteria, in thousands, as a function of time t, in hours.

Answer:

Use space f left parenthesis x right parenthesis equals a b to the power of x

  • The constant ratio (base) is b = 1.5

  • The initial value (at t = 0) is a = 8

B(t) = 8 \cdot 1.5^t

(c) Use the model to estimate the number of bacteria at t = 2.5 hours.

Answer:

Substitute t equals 2.5 into the equation from part (b)

B left parenthesis 2.5 right parenthesis equals 8 times 1.5 to the power of 2.5 end exponent equals 8 times 2.756 equals 22.045407...

Round to 3 decimal places

The estimated number of bacteria at t = 2.5 hours is approximately 22.045 thousand (or about 22,045 bacteria)

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Roger B

Author: Roger B

Expertise: Maths Content Creator

Roger's teaching experience stretches all the way back to 1992, and in that time he has taught students at all levels between Year 7 and university undergraduate. Having conducted and published postgraduate research into the mathematical theory behind quantum computing, he is more than confident in dealing with mathematics at any level the exam boards might throw at you.

Mark Curtis

Reviewer: Mark Curtis

Expertise: Maths Content Creator

Mark graduated twice from the University of Oxford: once in 2009 with a First in Mathematics, then again in 2013 with a PhD (DPhil) in Mathematics. He has had nine successful years as a secondary school teacher, specialising in A-Level Further Maths and running extension classes for Oxbridge Maths applicants. Alongside his teaching, he has written five internal textbooks, introduced new spiralling school curriculums and trained other Maths teachers through outreach programmes.