Solve the equation

-5e^-x + 9 = 6

I subtracted 9 to both sides and got:
-5e^-x= -3 < this is where I'm stuck at.

- 5e ^ ( - x ) + 9 = 6

- 5e ^ ( - x ) = 6 - 9

- 5e ^ ( - x ) = - 3 Divide both sides by - 5

e ^ ( - x ) = 3 / 5

Take the natural logarithm of both sides:

- x = - log (5 / 3 )

Divide both sides by -1:

x = log ( 5 / 3 )

x = 0.510826

Remark:

log mean natural logarithm

Tysm :D

To solve the equation -5e^-x + 9 = 6, you correctly subtracted 9 from both sides, which gives you -5e^-x = -3.

To continue solving for x, you need to isolate the variable e^-x. To do that, divide both sides of the equation by -5:

(-5e^-x) / -5 = -3 / -5

Simplifying the equation, you get:

e^-x = 3/5

Now, to solve for x, you need to take the natural logarithm (ln) of both sides. The natural logarithm is the inverse of the exponential function e^x. Applying the natural logarithm to both sides gives:

ln(e^-x) = ln(3/5)

Using the property that ln(e^a) = a, the equation simplifies to:

-x = ln(3/5)

Finally, to solve for x, multiply both sides of the equation by -1 to get:

x = -ln(3/5)

Therefore, the solution to the equation -5e^-x + 9 = 6 is x = -ln(3/5).