Can not be determined without the starting number in the series or n sub1
To find the 100th term of the expression (2n - 5), substitute (n) with 100: [ 2(100) - 5 = 200 - 5 = 195. ] Thus, the 100th term is 195.
To find the 100th term in the pattern defined by the formula (6n - 1), substitute (n = 100) into the formula: [ 6(100) - 1 = 600 - 1 = 599. ] Thus, the 100th term is 599.
To find the 100th term of a sequence, you typically need to identify the pattern or formula governing the sequence. If the sequence is arithmetic, you can use the formula ( a_n = a_1 + (n - 1)d ), where ( a_1 ) is the first term, ( d ) is the common difference, and ( n ) is the term number. For geometric sequences, the formula is ( a_n = a_1 \times r^{(n - 1)} ), where ( r ) is the common ratio. Substitute ( n = 100 ) into the appropriate formula to find the 100th term.
The formula is 6n + 7 where n is the nth term So 8th term would be (6 x 8) + 7 = 48 + 7 = 55
Can not be determined without the starting number in the series or n sub1
n = 100 + 7 = 107
To find the 100th term of the expression (2n - 5), substitute (n) with 100: [ 2(100) - 5 = 200 - 5 = 195. ] Thus, the 100th term is 195.
is 3*n + 7 ie take the value n, multiply by three and then add seven.
The formula is 6n + 7 where n is the nth term So 8th term would be (6 x 8) + 7 = 48 + 7 = 55
nth term is n squared plus three
7 + n = 14 n = 7
8, 9, 10, 11, 12, . . . etc.
The value of n is 3, by the commutative property.
2n2 + 15n + 7 = 2n2 + n + 14n + 7 = (2n2 + n) + (14n + 7) = n(2n + 1) + 7(2n + 1) = (2n + 1)(n + 7)
If n + 7 = 12, then n = 12 - 7
7n+10