THIS MAY OR MAY NOT BE CORRECT, but, from what I understand, this is how you do it:it looks like this so far, right?d=4 , a14=46so, using this formula---> an=a1 + d(n-1)plug in your values.now you have: an = a14 + 4(n-1)this is what i think is the answer. for help (better help) with arithmetic sequences, go to:http:/www.basic-mathematics.com/arithmetic-sequence.htmlthis website will really help! there is even an arithmetic sequence calculator!Hope I helped!
{(5, 2), (3, 4), (1, 2), (−1, 4)}
The sum of the terms in a sequence is called a series. Sequence is a function whose domain is the natural numbers. So f(1)= first entry in the sequence, and f(2) is the next.... f(n) is the nth term. We usually don't write sequences that way. Instead of f(1) we write, a1 to refer to the first term. The function tells us the rule we use to find the terms of the sequence. So for example, f says take n and square it. Then the first 3 terms of the sequence are 1, 4 and 9 and the first 3 terms of the series are 1, 5 and 14
Usually a sequence is written using subscripts to represent a number in the sequence. Example: The sequence 1, 7, 13, 19, 25 is by adding six each time. So we can write it as: a_0 = 1 a_1 = 7 a_(n) = a_(n-1) + 6, where n is the subscript.
the function of a pencil is to write with out getting your hands dirty and to be able to write on paper instead of stone.
The answer depends on what the explicit rule is!
You can write it as Un or f(n) equal to some function of n, where the function can be anything at all.
THIS MAY OR MAY NOT BE CORRECT, but, from what I understand, this is how you do it:it looks like this so far, right?d=4 , a14=46so, using this formula---> an=a1 + d(n-1)plug in your values.now you have: an = a14 + 4(n-1)this is what i think is the answer. for help (better help) with arithmetic sequences, go to:http:/www.basic-mathematics.com/arithmetic-sequence.htmlthis website will really help! there is even an arithmetic sequence calculator!Hope I helped!
{(5, 2), (3, 4), (1, 2), (−1, 4)}
A sequence is just an ordered set of events. You write it by telling what happened in order.
There is no simple answer because there is no simple rule for primes: it is certainly NOT an arithmetic progression.
The sum of the terms in a sequence is called a series. Sequence is a function whose domain is the natural numbers. So f(1)= first entry in the sequence, and f(2) is the next.... f(n) is the nth term. We usually don't write sequences that way. Instead of f(1) we write, a1 to refer to the first term. The function tells us the rule we use to find the terms of the sequence. So for example, f says take n and square it. Then the first 3 terms of the sequence are 1, 4 and 9 and the first 3 terms of the series are 1, 5 and 14
A few words about the family, your hobbies, interests, something that describes your values and function as a family.
write something, leave a space, write something else.
write something, leave a space, write something else.
Finding the final cost of an item that originally sold for x dollars but is marked down 40% and has an 8.25% tax rate.
a = b = c