The amount of medication that stays in the bloodstream is the same at 3.04 hours for the two medications
The functions are given as:
[tex]f(x)=-1.25\cdot \ln{\left(\dfrac{1}{x}\right)}[/tex]
[tex]g(x)=-1.8\cdot\ln\left(\dfrac{2.1}{x}\right)[/tex]
Next, we represent both functions on a graph.
From the attached graph, we can see that both functions intersect at (11.34, 3.04)
This means that the amount of medication that stays in the bloodstream is the same at 3.04 hours for the two medications
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Complete question
A pharmaceutical scientist studying two medications wonders how long different amounts of each medicine stay in someone's bloodstream. The amount of time (in hours) one medication stays in the bloodstream can be modeled by [tex]f(x)=-1.25\cdot \ln{\left(\dfrac{1}{x}\right)}[/tex] where x is the initial amount of the medicine (in milligrams). The corresponding function for the other medication is [tex]g(x)=-1.8\cdot\ln\left(\dfrac{2.1}{x}\right)[/tex]. Here are the graphs of