An arithmetic sequence does not have a constant rate of increase or decrease between successive terms, so it cannot be called anything!
The constant increase or decrease is called the common difference.
An arithmetic sequence is where a constant is added to the base case, and then added again until the proscribed limit is reached. An example is 1, 3, 5, 7, where the constant is 2 and the base case is 1. The constant can be negative, such as -4, base case 16, which leads to a descending sequence of 16 12 8 4 0 -4 -8...
An arithmetic sequence is a group or sequence of numbers where, except for the first number, each of the subsequent number is determined by the same rule or set of rules. * * * * * The above answer is incorrect. The rule can only be additive: it cannot be multiplicative or anything else.
It is the start of an arithmetic sequence.
Sequence that has addition or (subtractions*) subtraction will be +(-4)
The sequence is neither arithmetic nor geometric.
In a convoluted way, yes.
An arithmetic sequence.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.
Sequence of numbers such that difference of any two successive member of the sequence is constant.Such as.....3,5,7,9........ Here in this example 2 is constant.
The sequence in the question is NOT an arithmetic sequence. In an arithmetic sequence the difference between each term and its predecessor (the term immediately before) is a constant - including the sign. It is not enough for the difference between two successive terms (in any order) to remain constant. In the above sequence, the difference is -7 for the first two intervals and then changes to +7.
The difference between successive terms in an arithmetic sequence is a constant. Denote this by r. Suppose the first term is a. Then the nth term, of the sequence is given by t(n) = (a-r) + n*r or a + (n-1)*r
It is an arithmetic sequence (with constant difference 0), or a geometric sequence (with constant ratio 1).
This a progression that involves addition or subtraction of successive terms in a sequence.
No, the Fibonacci sequence is not an arithmetic because the difference between consecutive terms is not constant