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Ch. 10 - Sequences and Infinite Series
Briggs - Calculus: Early Transcendentals 3rd Edition
Briggs3rd EditionCalculus: Early TranscendentalsISBN: 9780136847243Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 10, Problem 10.2.71a

{Use of Tech} Periodic dosing
Many people take aspirin on a regular basis as a preventive measure for heart disease. Suppose a person takes 80 mg of aspirin every 24 hours. Assume aspirin has a half-life of 24 hours; that is, every 24 hours, half of the drug in the blood is eliminated.


a.Find a recurrence relation for the sequence {dₙ} that gives the amount of drug in the blood after the nᵗʰ dose, where d₁ = 80.

Verified step by step guidance
1
Understand the problem context: The person takes 80 mg of aspirin every 24 hours, and the drug's half-life is 24 hours, meaning after 24 hours, half of the drug currently in the blood remains.
Define the sequence {dₙ} where dₙ represents the amount of aspirin in the blood immediately after the nᵗʰ dose is taken.
Recognize that between doses, the amount of drug in the blood reduces to half due to the half-life property. So, just before the nᵗʰ dose, the amount of drug is half of the amount after the (n-1)ᵗʰ dose, which is \( \frac{1}{2} d_{n-1} \).
When the nᵗʰ dose of 80 mg is taken, it adds to the remaining drug in the blood. Therefore, the amount after the nᵗʰ dose is \( d_n = \frac{1}{2} d_{n-1} + 80 \).
State the initial condition given: \( d_1 = 80 \), since after the first dose, the amount in the blood is exactly 80 mg.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Recurrence Relations

A recurrence relation defines each term of a sequence based on previous terms. In this problem, the amount of drug after each dose depends on the remaining drug from the previous dose plus the new dose. Understanding how to express this relationship mathematically is key to modeling the drug concentration over time.
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Intro To Related Rates

Half-Life and Exponential Decay

Half-life is the time required for a substance to reduce to half its initial amount. Here, aspirin’s half-life of 24 hours means the drug amount halves every day. This concept helps determine how much drug remains in the blood before the next dose, forming the decay factor in the recurrence.
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Sequences and Series in Modeling

Sequences represent ordered lists of numbers, often modeling quantities over time. In this context, the sequence {dₙ} tracks the drug amount after each dose. Recognizing how to use sequences to model repeated dosing and elimination is essential for predicting long-term drug levels.
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Introduction to Sequences