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What is the 14th term in the arithmetic sequence in which the first is 100 and the common difference is -4? a14= a + 13d = 100 + 13(-4) = 48
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A single number, such as 11111, cannot define an arithmetic sequence. On the other hand, it can be the first element of any kind of sequence. On the other hand, if the question was about ``1, 1, 1, 1, 1'' then that is an arithmetic sequence as there is a common difference of 0 between each term.
It is an Arithmetic Progression with a constant difference of 11 and first term 15.
What is the 14th term in the arithmetic sequence in which the first is 100 and the common difference is -4? a14= a + 13d = 100 + 13(-4) = 48
It is a + 8d where a is the first term and d is the common difference.
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From any term after the first, subtract the preceding term.
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For an Arithmetic Progression, Sum = 15[a + 7d].{a = first term and d = common difference} For a Geometric Progression, Sum = a[1-r^15]/(r-1).{r = common ratio }.
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The sum of the first 12 terms of an arithmetic sequence is: sum = (n/2)(2a + (n - 1)d) = (12/2)(2a + (12 - 1)d) = 6(2a + 11d) = 12a + 66d where a is the first term and d is the common difference.
Since there are no graphs following, the answer is none of them.
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You subtract any two adjacent numbers in the sequence. For example, in the sequence (1, 4, 7, 10, ...), you can subtract 4 - 1, or 7 - 4, or 10 - 7; in any case you will get 3, which is the common difference.