Talk:Super-exponential growth

I believe this article (as of 11/21/2006) is incorrect. The following statement in the article says: "Exponential growth follows a curve like y=x^2 or y=x^100, whereas super-exponential growth follows a curve like y=2^x or y=3^x. In very short order, super-exponential takes over and gets quite large with respect to exponential growth." The first two cases are examples of polynomial growth (x to some power). The two later examples are exponential (a constant to the power x). Super-exponential is essentially iterated exponentiation in my understanding. I'll try to fix this soon. --Turketwh 22:22, 21 November 2006 (UTC)

I share Turketwh's concern. I am removing my proposed deletion and making this a redirect to tetration, which is (I think) where the term "super-exponential" comes from. Kevinsam 06:49, 19 February 2007 (UTC)