No.
No. It is a sequence for which the rule is a quadratic expression.
In an arithmetic sequence the same number (positive or negative) is added to each term to get to the next term.In a geometric sequence the same number (positive or negative) is multiplied into each term to get to the next term.A geometric sequence uses multiplicative and divisive formulas while an arithmetic uses additive and subtractive formulas.
Well, honey, neither. That sequence is a hot mess. In an arithmetic sequence, you add the same number each time, and in a geometric sequence, you multiply by the same number each time. This sequence is just doing its own thing, so it's neither arithmetic nor geometric.
a sequence of shifted geometric numbers
A geometric sequence is : a•r^n while a quadratic sequence is a• n^2 + b•n + c So the answer is no, unless we are talking about an infinite sequence of zeros which strictly speaking is both a geometric and a quadratic sequence.
A static sequence: for example a geometric sequence with common ratio = 1.
No.
No. It is a sequence for which the rule is a quadratic expression.
In an arithmetic sequence the same number (positive or negative) is added to each term to get to the next term.In a geometric sequence the same number (positive or negative) is multiplied into each term to get to the next term.A geometric sequence uses multiplicative and divisive formulas while an arithmetic uses additive and subtractive formulas.
Well, honey, neither. That sequence is a hot mess. In an arithmetic sequence, you add the same number each time, and in a geometric sequence, you multiply by the same number each time. This sequence is just doing its own thing, so it's neither arithmetic nor geometric.
Yes, that's what a geometric sequence is about.
These are called the second differences. If they are all the same (non-zero) then the original sequence is a quadratic.
a sequence of shifted geometric numbers
antonette taño invented geometric sequence since 1990's
A descending geometric sequence is a sequence in which the ratio between successive terms is a positive constant which is less than 1.
This is not a geometric series since -18/54 is not the same as -36/12