A colony of bacteria is growing exponentially according to the function below, where T is in hours. How many bacteria are there after 7 hours?

B(T)= 4*e^(0.8)T

That is completely wrong. I'm sure you didn't type the equation in right or something. The correct answer is 1081-1082 bacteria.

To find the number of bacteria after 7 hours, we need to find the value of the function B(T) when T = 7.

The given function is B(T) = 4 * e^(0.8T), where T represents the number of hours.

To find the number of bacteria after 7 hours, we substitute T = 7 into the function:

B(7) = 4 * e^(0.8 * 7)

First, calculate the value inside the exponent: 0.8 * 7 = 5.6

Next, calculate e^(5.6) using the value of e, which is approximately 2.71828:

e^(5.6) ≈ 2.71828^(5.6)

Now, use a calculator or computer program to evaluate the exponential term:

e^(5.6) ≈ 295.84747

Finally, multiply the result by the coefficient 4:

B(7) = 4 * 295.84747

B(7) ≈ 1183.38988

Therefore, there are approximately 1183.38988 bacteria after 7 hours.

A colony of bacteria is growing exponentially according to the function below, where T is in hours. How many bacteria are there after 6 hours?

B(T)= 4*e^(0.8)T

B(T)=4*e^(0.8)(7)

7 for T
B(T)=62.3151
(plugged the equation into a graphing calculator)