at what rate of interest per annum,the amount of 10000 will be doubled in 5 years,interest being compounded quarterly

let the quarterly rate be j

1000(1+j)^20 = 2000
(1+j)^20 = 2
1+j = 2^(1/20) = 1.035265
j = .035265

the annual rate compounded quarterly is .14106
= 14.1 %

(good luck finding that these days)

no problem. go to any bookie or loan shark!

To determine the rate of interest per annum required for an amount to double in a given time period, compounded quarterly, we can use the compound interest formula.

The formula for compound interest with quarterly compounding is:

A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt)

Where:
A = the final amount (twice the initial amount in this case)
P = the principal amount (initial amount)
r = the annual interest rate (unknown)
n = the number of times that interest is compounded per year (4, since it's quarterly)
t = the number of years

In this case, we want the initial amount of $10,000 to double in 5 years. So we have:

A = 2P (since we want the final amount to be twice the initial amount)
P = $10,000
n = 4
t = 5

Plugging these values into the formula, we get:

2P = P(1 + r/4)^(4*5)

Canceling out the P on both sides, we have:

2 = (1 + r/4)^(20)

To solve for r, we need to isolate it. One way to do this is by using logarithms:

log(2) = log((1 + r/4)^(20))

Using the property of logarithms, we can bring the exponent down:

log(2) = 20log(1 + r/4)

Now we can solve for r by isolating it:

log(1 + r/4) = log(2)/20

To remove the logarithm, we can raise both sides as a power of 10:

10^(log(1 + r/4)) = 10^(log(2)/20)

This simplifies to:

1 + r/4 = 10^(log(2)/20)

Now we can isolate r:

r/4 = 10^(log(2)/20) - 1

Multiply both sides by 4 to get:

r = 4(10^(log(2)/20) - 1)

Using a calculator, we can evaluate the right side of the equation to get the approximate value for r.