Math, asked by bhaweshkarki38, 1 month ago

In how many years will a sum of money double itself at 5% compound interest half yearly.

Answers

Answered by babuminz7069
1

Considering the formula for compound interest, which is F=P⋅(1+r)t, where:

F is the final amount (principal + interest)

P is the principal (initial value)

r is the interest rate (5% in your case)

t is the period of time the interest rate will be applied by (the answer you’re looking for)

So, we just need to work the formula to get to the desired result.

Replacing F with 2P (since in your case the final amount will be double the initial one): 2P=P⋅(1+r)t

Dividing by P on both sides: 2=(1+r)t

Applying log2 on both sides to get t down: log22=log2(1+r)t

Continuing: 1=t⋅log2(1+r)

Isolating t: 1/t=log2(1+r)

Then: t=1/log2(1+r)

When we replace r with 0.05 (5%), we find t=14.2067, which means that applying an interest rate of 5% per year, the initial amount will double in 14.2067 years, or 14 years and almost 2 and a half months (2.48 to be exact).

Answered by youriifather
0

Answer:

nearly 3to5 years in india brother

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