Exponential Functions and Equations

📈 Exponential Functions and Equations

Basic introduction 

🎯 Part A: The Exponential Function

Definition

An exponential function is a function in which the variable appears in the exponent (the power).

\(f(x) = a^x\)

where \(a > 0\) and \(a \neq 1\)

General form:

\(f(x) = b \cdot a^x + c\)

📊 Properties of \(f(x) = a^x\)

Property \(a > 1\) \(0 < a < 1\)
Behaviour 📈 Increasing 📉 Decreasing
Domain \(\mathbb{R}\) (all real numbers)
Range \((0, \infty)\) (positive only)
Fixed point \((0, 1)\) because \(a^0 = 1\)
Asymptote x-axis (the line \(y = 0\))
y-intercept \((0, 1)\)

📉📈 The Graphs

\(a > 1\) (e.g. \(2^x\))
x y (0,1) y=0

Increasing, approaches 0 on the left

\(0 < a < 1\) (e.g. \(0.5^x\))
x y (0,1) y=0

Decreasing, approaches 0 on the right

✏️ Examples of Exponential Functions

\(f(x) = 2^x\)

Base 2, increasing

\(f(x) = 3 \cdot 2^x\)

Vertical stretch by factor 3

\(f(x) = 2^x + 3\)

Shift 3 up, asymptote y=3

\(f(x) = e^x\)

Base e ≈ 2.718

🧮 Part B: Exponential Equations

Definition

An exponential equation is an equation in which the unknown appears in the exponent.

Examples:

\(2^x = 8\) , \(3^{2x+1} = 27\) , \(5^x = 5^{3x-4}\)

⭐ Core Solving Principle

\(a^{f(x)} = a^{g(x)} \implies f(x) = g(x)\)

(when \(a > 0, a \neq 1\))

💡 In words: if the bases are equal, then the exponents are equal!

🔧 Solving Methods

Method 1: Matching Bases

When it is possible to bring both sides to the same base.

Example: Solve \(2^x = 32\)

Solution:

Recognise that \(32 = 2^5\)

\(2^x = 2^5\)

Bases are equal, therefore: \(x = 5\)

Example: Solve \(9^x = 27\)

Solution:

Convert to a common base (3):

\(9 = 3^2\) and \(27 = 3^3\)

\((3^2)^x = 3^3\)

\(3^{2x} = 3^3\)

\(2x = 3\)

\(x = \frac{3}{2} = 1.5\)

Method 2: Using Logarithms

When it is not possible to bring both sides to the same base.

Example: Solve \(2^x = 5\)

Solution:

Apply log to both sides:

\(\log(2^x) = \log 5\)

\(x \cdot \log 2 = \log 5\)

\(x = \frac{\log 5}{\log 2} \approx \frac{0.699}{0.301} \approx 2.32\)

💡 General formula:

\(a^x = b \implies x = \frac{\log b}{\log a} = \log_a b\)

Method 3: Substitution (disguised quadratic)

When different powers of the same base appear.

Example: Solve \(4^x - 6 \cdot 2^x + 8 = 0\)

Solution:

Note that \(4^x = (2^2)^x = (2^x)^2\)

Substitute \(t = 2^x\) (where \(t > 0\)):

\(t^2 - 6t + 8 = 0\)

\((t-2)(t-4) = 0\)

\(t = 2\) or \(t = 4\)

Back to x:

\(2^x = 2 \implies x = 1\)

\(2^x = 4 \implies x = 2\)

Answer: \(x = 1\) or \(x = 2\)

⚠️ Important: always remember that \(t = a^x > 0\)!

If \(t \leq 0\) arises, that solution is invalid.

📐 Reminder: Laws of Exponents

Law Formula Example
Product of powers \(a^m \cdot a^n = a^{m+n}\) \(2^3 \cdot 2^4 = 2^7\)
Quotient of powers \(\frac{a^m}{a^n} = a^{m-n}\) \(\frac{2^5}{2^2} = 2^3\)
Power of a power \((a^m)^n = a^{m \cdot n}\) \((2^3)^2 = 2^6\)
Zero exponent \(a^0 = 1\) \(5^0 = 1\)
Negative exponent \(a^{-n} = \frac{1}{a^n}\) \(2^{-3} = \frac{1}{8}\)
Fractional exponent \(a^{\frac{m}{n}} = \sqrt[n]{a^m}\) \(8^{\frac{2}{3}} = \sqrt[3]{64} = 4\)

⚖️ Exponential Inequalities

Important rule: the direction of the inequality depends on the base!

\(a > 1\)

\(a^{f(x)} > a^{g(x)}\)

\(\Downarrow\)

\(f(x) > g(x)\)

Direction preserved

\(0 < a < 1\)

\(a^{f(x)} > a^{g(x)}\)

\(\Downarrow\)

\(f(x) < g(x)\)

Direction reverses!

✏️ Example: Solve \(2^x > 8\)

\(2^x > 2^3\)

Base 2 > 1, so the direction is preserved:

\(x > 3\)

✏️ Example: Solve \(\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^x > 4\)

\(\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^x > \left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^{-2}\) (because \(4 = 2^2 = \left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^{-2}\))

Base \(\frac{1}{2}\) < 1, so the direction reverses:

\(x < -2\)

💡 Tips for the Exam

1️⃣ Try a common base first

Always check whether you can bring both sides to the same base before using logs

2️⃣ Know your powers

Powers of 2: 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64...

Powers of 3: 3, 9, 27, 81...

3️⃣ Substitution t

When both \(a^{2x}\) and \(a^x\) appear – substitute \(t = a^x\)

4️⃣ Inequalities

Base > 1: direction preserved

Base < 1: direction reverses!

📝 Summary

Exponential function: \(f(x) = a^x\)

Solving principle: \(a^{f(x)} = a^{g(x)} \implies f(x) = g(x)\)

Using log: \(a^x = b \implies x = \log_a b\)

The exponential function and the logarithm are inverse functions!