Rates of Growth
Introduction:
If I ride
my
bike to school it is a 6.5 mile trip. If I do it
roundtrip, it
doubles to 13 miles. This rate of growth is called
linear.
When you double the trip it doubles the length, when you triple
the
trip it triples the length. The same is true if you
measure the
force on a spring. It takes twice as much force to pull a
spring
twice as far. This all seems kind of obvious, but it is a
different story with other
things.
If I paint
a
5x5 foot mural, it takes 25 square feet of
paint. If I double the length of the wall on each side, so
that
it's 10 by 10 feet, then it takes 100 square feet of paint, four
times
as much. For the paint, when I double the wall length I
use 4x as
much paint, and when I triple the wall length I use 9x as much
paint. When I drop a ball from a cliff, it falls 16 feet
in one
second, but if I double the time it falls 64 feet (4x as much), and if
I triple the time to three seconds it falls 144 feet (8x as
much). This kind of growth rate is called quadratic or n2.
To fill up
my
5' x 5' x 5' hot tub it takes 125 cubic feet of water. If
I
double the dimensions of the tub, my 10' x 10' x 10' hot
tub will
hold 1000 cubic feet of water, or 8x
times as much. The
rate of growth is cubic. If you change the input by a
factor of k
then you change the output by a factor of k3.
If I triple the dimensions, then how many times greater is the
volume
of water? Answer: 27 times.
(Optional:
For
those of you who are sophisticated algebra users, here is a
proof. Let the cubic relationship be cx3,
for some number c > 0. When the input x is changed by a factor
of k, the output c(kx)3 = ck3x3
= k3(cx3),
is changed by a factor of k3.
Applications:
1. A
six
foot man
weighs 180 pounds. What would you expect a 7 foot man to
weigh? People are mot cube shaped or perfectly
proportioned, and
there are huge differences in peoples' weight. Neverthless
there
are good and bad ways to try to estimate the solution to thisd
question. Is a man a 1-dimensional, 2-dimensional or
3-dimensional object? Is a man like the distance, the
wall, or
the pool in terms of dimension? A man is
3-dimensional.
Therefore we must use the n3 rate of growth.
Seven
feet is 7/6 times 6 feet, so you would expect the person's
weight to
increase by a factor of (7/6)3 = 1.59
approximately.
Therefore we expect the weight of a 7 foot man to be about 180 x
1.59 =
286.2. I have heard otherwise intelligent people
insist
that it should be more like 180 x (7/6) = 210.
2.
When
cells
grow to a certain size, their rate of growth slows until
they stop growing entirely. They have reached their size
limit.
At this point, fluid diffuses
from the cell and
one
of these larger cells divides into two smaller cells, and the rate
of
growth
again increases. Why is this? Why do you think a cell
has a
size limit? Think about what this has to do with rates of
growth
before you read on.
The volume
of
the cell is a 3-dimensional quantity,
the surface area of the cell is a 2-dimensional quantity, and the
diameter of the cell is a one-dimensional quantity. That
means if
the diameter of the cell doubles, then the surface area will grow
by
4x, and the volume will
grow
by 8x. If a
cell
keeps
growing, the pressure per square unit of the fluid inside the cell
on
the
cell membrane will continually increase because the volume of
fluid is
increasing faster than the surface of the containing
membrane. At some point, the pressure of the inner
fluid on
the cell membrane will cause the fluid to diffuse out of the cell, and
the
cell stops growing. If the membrane and fluid grew at the
same
rate,
there might be no limit to the size of a cell!
3.
For
a uniform material, the weight
it can carry is proportional to its cross-sectional area
(quadratic).
Therefore if you double all the dimensions of a stone building
supported
on stone pillars, the weight (cubic) increases by a factor of 8,
but the supporting capacities only increase by a factor of
four. If you keep making the building larger, there is
a
limit to how many times the dimensions can
be doubled before the building will crumble.
This is
also
true for humans, and it is the reason that there are no
giants. A
human that is supported by his/her femur bones. These bones are
the
upper thigh bones and they are the widest and largest bones in the
body. Just like a stone pillar, the weight they can bear
before
they snap, is proportional to their cross-section. When you
increase the dimensions by twofold, the cross-section of the
femurs
increase by a factor of four, while the weight of the human
increases
eightfold. Sooner or later, if you keep making a
proportionally
larger human, he will collapse under his own weight.
A great
article
- though a bit advanced - explains these ideas with more
examples and lots of references to Galileo
who first wrote about these ideas with scientific applications in
mind.
Problems:
Under Construction All Year