A colony of Salmonella bacteria

has a current population of 1000

organisms. If this particular strain has

a doubling time, d, of 18 minutes,

calculate the future population after

180 minutes.

1000er^18
1e+54

It doubles ten times

t x
0 1000
18 2000 one time
36 4000 2 times
54 8000 3 times
72 16000 4 times or 1000*2^4
90
108
......
180 1024*1000 = 1,024,000 = 1000*2^10

You might want the equation:

number = 1000 (2^(t/18) )

so when t = 180
number = 1000 (2^10) = 1000(2^10) , the same result that Damon got

1024000?

To calculate the future population of a colony of Salmonella bacteria, we can use the formula for exponential growth, which is:

N = N0 * (1 + r)^t

Where:
N is the future population
N0 is the initial population
r is the growth rate per unit of time (expressed as a decimal)
t is the time period

In this case, the initial population is 1000 organisms, and the doubling time is 18 minutes. So, the growth rate per minute can be calculated as follows:

r = 1 / d = 1 / 18 = 0.0556

Now, let's calculate the future population after 180 minutes:

N = 1000 * (1 + 0.0556)^180

Using a scientific calculator or a tool like Excel, we can compute this value:

N ≈ 1e+54

Therefore, the future population of the Salmonella bacteria colony after 180 minutes would be approximately 1e+54 organisms.