A Level Maths Notes: C2 – Arithmetic Sequences
An arithmetic sequence is a sequence such that the difference between successive terms is constant.
2, 6, 10, 14, 18
has a constant common difference term 4. We add 4 to each term to get the next term. We can write down the rule:
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Arithmetic sequences can be defined iteratively, so that each term is calculated from the last term, or in closed form, such that we have a formula for the nth term.
For the above sequence the
closed form would be
In
general the closed form for the nth term can be found from the
expression
where
is
the first term and
is
the common difference. There is also a formula for the sum of the
first n terms:
The
fomulae may be used in the following ways:
A sequence starts 5, 9, 13, 17, 21. Find the sum of all the terms between 100 and 200.
the first term
is
5 and the common difference
is
4. We need to find how many terms are less than 100 and how many are
less than 200.
terms
are less than or equal to 100.
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terms
are less than or equal to 200.
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The difference of
and
will
give the sum of all the terms between 100 and 200, so the answer is
4949-1224=3725
Example: for the sequence 5, 12, 19, 26, 33 find the sum of all the terms less than 200.
The first term
is
5 and the common difference
is
7.
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