94 and you skip it by 8's
nevermind i got it!!
It is T(n) = n2 + 4*n + 2.
fsedaz sd
It is T(n) = n2 - 2n + 6
To find the nth term in a quadratic sequence, we first need to determine the pattern. In this case, the difference between consecutive terms is increasing by 3, 5, 7, 9, and so on. This indicates a quadratic sequence. To find the 9th term, we need to use the formula for the nth term of a quadratic sequence, which is given by: Tn = an^2 + bn + c. By plugging in n=9 and solving for the 9th term, we can find that the 9th term in this quadratic sequence is 74.
You cant solve the next term (next number) in this sequence. You need more terms, because this is either a "quadratic sequence", or a "linear and quadratic sequence", and you need more terms than this to solve a "linear and quadratic sequence" and for this particular "quadratic sequence" you would need more terms to solve nth term, which would solve what the next number is. If this is homework, check with your teacher if he wrote the wrong sum.
The first step is to find the sequence rule. The sequence could be arithmetic. quadratic, geometric, recursively defined or any one of many special sequences. The sequence rule will give you the value of the nth term in terms of its position, n. Then simply substitute the next value of n in the rule.
-4, -3, 0, 5, 12, 21, 32
You need the rule that generates the sequence.
I assume that would refer to the sequence of square numbers:1, 4, 9, 16, 25, etc. To generate the sequence, you can square each number: 1 squared, 2 squared, etc.
It is the description of a rule which describes how the terms of a sequence are defined in terms of their position in the sequence.
6n-5 is the nth term of this sequence