Growth and decay
Growth and decay is the main applied reason exponentials and logarithms show up everywhere. If a quantity changes at a rate proportional to its current value, then
The solution is
If the quantity grows; if it decays. This is the simplest Ordinary differential equation and the cleanest example of why is the natural exponential base.
Half-life and doubling time
For decay, . The half-life satisfies
For growth, the doubling time is .
Why logarithms matter
Logarithms solve for time or exponent:
They also convert multiplicative comparisons into additive ones. This is why logarithmic thinking appears in magnitude scales, signal levels, likelihoods, entropy, and wide dynamic-range plots. For an astrophysics example, compare with Cosmology distance methods.
Common pitfalls
- Confusing absolute change with proportional change. Linear growth has ; exponential growth has .
- Forgetting units: has units of inverse time, so is dimensionless.
- Using base logs in formulas derived with without the conversion factor .
Mental model
Each equal time step multiplies the quantity by the same factor. That is different from adding the same amount each step. On a semilog plot, pure exponential data becomes a straight line, and the slope encodes the rate constant.