Susan finds an alien artifact in the desert, where there are temperature variations from a low in the 30s at night to a high in the 100s in the day. She is interested in how the artifact will respond to faster variations in temperature, so she kidnaps the artifact, takes it back to her lab (hotly pursued by the military police who patrol Area 51), and sticks it in an "oven" -- that is, a closed box whose temperature she can control precisely.

Let be the temperature of the artifact. Newton's law of cooling says that changes at a rate proportional to the difference between the temperature of the environment and the temperature of the artifact. This says that there is a constant , not dependent on time, such that , where is the temperature of the environment (the oven).

Before collecting the artifact from the desert, Susan measured its temperature at a couple of times, and she has determined that for the alien artifact, .

Susan preheats her oven to degrees Fahrenheit (she has stubbornly refused to join the metric world). At time the oven is at exactly degrees and is heating up, and the oven runs through a temperature cycle every minutes, in which its temperature varies by degrees above and degrees below degrees.

Let be the temperature of the oven after minutes.


At time , when the artifact is at a temperature of degrees, she puts it in the oven. Let be the temperature of the artifact at time . Then (degrees)

Write a differential equation which models the temperature of the artifact.
.
Note: Use rather than since the latter confuses the computer. Don't enter units for this equation.

Solve the differential equation. To do this, you may find it helpful to know that if is a constant, then



After Susan puts in the artifact in the oven, the military police break in and take her away. Think about what happens to her artifact as and fill in the following sentence:

For large values of , even though the oven temperature varies between 45 and 105 degrees, the artifact varies from to degrees.

You can earn partial credit on this problem.