This is an exponential functions problem. Please help me with this!
1 Answers
There is no "nice" solution here (EDIT: referred to original question, not the edited one).
If you let $a = \log_3 5$ and $y = 3^x$, you can rewrite the equation as:
$15(y+1) - 243(y^a - 2) = 0 \implies 243y^a - 15y + 471 = 0$
but again there's nothing much you can do with that because $a$ is transcendental (but this form is a little more amenable to a numerical solution).
You can solve it approximately using numerical or graphical methods, and that would give you $x \approx 0.4803$.
EDIT: You have edited the question to be much more amenable to an elementary and exact solution.
If you meant $15\cdot(3^{x+1}) - 243\cdot(5^{x - 2}) = 0$, this is quite easily solvable.
Start by rearranging the equation to $15\cdot(3^{x+1}) = 243\cdot(5^{x - 2})$, then take logs of both sides. It doesn't matter which base you use, as long as you're consistent.
$\displaystyle \log 15 + (x+1)\log 3 = \log 243 + (x-2)\log 5$
Further rearrangement gives:
$\displaystyle x(\log 3 - \log 5) = \log 243 - 2 \log 5 - \log 15 - \log 3$
and the final solution is:
$\displaystyle x = \frac{\log 243 - 2 \log 5 - \log 15 - \log 3}{(\log 3 - \log 5)}$
I'll leave the final simplifications using basic log rules to you. You should get a very simple final answer.
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$15\cdot 3^{x+1}=243\cdot5^{x-2}$ can be solved by taking $\log$s of both sides. – anon Jul 07 '15 at 06:24
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@anon The question was edited after I wrote my answer! I will edit my answer to account for this. – Deepak Jul 07 '15 at 06:27
$3^{x+1}$– Surb Jul 07 '15 at 06:17