Let's Chat

Arithmetic Progression

Lesson 2

10 Classes - 10 hours

An arithmetic progression is a sequence of numbers such that the difference of any two successive members is a constant.

For example, the sequence 1, 2, 3, 4, … is an arithmetic progression with common difference 1.

Second example: the sequence 3, 5, 7, 9, 11,… is an arithmetic progression
with common difference 2.
Third example: the sequence 20, 10, 0, -10, -20, -30, … is an arithmetic progression
with common difference -10.

We denote by d the common difference.

By an we denote the n-th term of an arithmetic progression.

By Sn we denote the sum of the first n elements of an arithmetic series.
Arithmetic series means the sum of the elements of an arithmetic progression.

a1 + an = a2 + an-1 = … = ak + an-k+1

and

an = ½(an-1 + an+1)

Sample: let 1, 11, 21, 31, 41, 51… be an arithmetic progression.

51 + 1 = 41 + 11 = 31 + 21
and
11 = (21 + 1)/2
21 = (31 + 11)/2…


If the initial term of an arithmetic progression is a1 and the common difference of successive members is d, then the n-th term of the sequence is given by

an = a1 + (n – 1)d, n = 1, 2, …

The sum S of the first n numbers of an arithmetic progression is given by the formula:

S = ½(a1 + an)n

where a1 is the first term and an the last one.

or

S = ½(2a1 + d(n-1))n

In mathematics, a geometric progression(sequence) (also inaccurately known as a geometric series) is a sequence of numbers such that the quotient of any two successive members of the sequence is a constant called the common ratio of the sequence.

The geometric progression can be written as:

ar0=a, ar1=ar, ar2, ar3, …
where r ≠ 0r is the common ratio and a is a scale factor(also the first term).

Instructors

Book A Class

Loading...
X