Exponential asymptote

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Pat
Pat on 26 May 2011
Hi,
I used an exponential function to fit my data and I'd like to know where the function reaches a plateau. How do I calculate that?
Here's the function I used: y = a1+a2*exp(-a3*t)
I also tried a power function : y = a*b^t
Thanks in advance!
  2 Comments
Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski on 26 May 2011
I'm excited to read John's response if he sees this.
Andrew Newell
Andrew Newell on 26 May 2011
Google "identifying asymptotes"

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Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 26 May 2011
a1+a2*exp(-a3*t) plateaus at the point where a2*exp(-a3*t) is less than eps(a1) . You can work backwards from there:
a2*exp(-a3*t) = eps(a1)
exp(-a3*t) = eps(a1)/a2
-a3*t = ln(eps(a1)/a2)
t = -ln(eps(a1)/a2)/a3
You might need to tweak this calculation if a1 or a2 are negative.
  1 Comment
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 26 May 2011
That is the time t at which the plateau is reached. If your maximum t for your data is less than that number, your function has not reached the plateau.
You would know if you had reached a plateau because all of the function values after that would be identical (to within round-off error)

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