It's technically called an arithmetic sequence
An arithmetic sequence.
An arithmetic sequence is a sequence of numbers such that the difference between successive terms is a constant. This constant is called the common difference and is usually denoted by d. If the first term is a, then the iterative definition of the sequence is U(1) = a, and U(n+1) = U(n) + d for n = 1, 2, 3, ... Equivalently, the position-to-term rule which defines the sequence is U(n) = a + (n-1)*d for n = 1, 2, 3, ...
A factor.
These are called the second differences. If they are all the same (non-zero) then the original sequence is a quadratic.
it is called the product
An arithmetic sequence.
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.
The difference between succeeding terms in a sequence is called the common difference in an arithmetic sequence, and the common ratio in a geometric sequence.
In a convoluted way, yes.
tidal range
An arithmetic sequence is a sequence of numbers such that the difference between successive terms is a constant. This constant is called the common difference and is usually denoted by d. If the first term is a, then the iterative definition of the sequence is U(1) = a, and U(n+1) = U(n) + d for n = 1, 2, 3, ... Equivalently, the position-to-term rule which defines the sequence is U(n) = a + (n-1)*d for n = 1, 2, 3, ...
A factor.
Arithmetic Sequence
These are called the second differences. If they are all the same (non-zero) then the original sequence is a quadratic.
it is called the product
A product!
In an arithmetic sequence, the difference between any term and the previous term is a constant.