not really I was taught basic sequences onlySo have you been taught to calculate sequences?
You could calculate the answer, but just look at the sequence. What is in the numerator of every fraction in the sequence?
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1You could calculate the answer, but just look at the sequence. What is in the numerator of every fraction in the sequence?
Option BCorrect. Which of the answers now seems correct as a final response?
The sequence is \(a_n=n^{-2}=\frac{1}{n^2}\)I need help !
Question: If the sequence 1, 1/4, 1/9, 1/16, .... then a14
a. 3/196
b.1/196
c.2/196
d.5/196
That depends on whether the 1st term is a0 or a1. I forget where I heard that fromThe sequence is \(a_n=n^{-2}=\frac{1}{n^2}\)
I think the pattern is multiplying numbers ( 1, 2, 3, 4, etc.) with the same number.You need to look for two things in sequences. One is what is not changing. The answer, seriously, is the 1 in the numerator and the division line. Now you need to decide what is changing. Clearly the denominator is changing. So far we know that the 14th term (possible before reducing) will be in the form of \(\displaystyle \dfrac{1}{}\).
Now we look at the denominator and see that they are 1 (1 = 1/1), 4, 9 and 16. To do this problem you need to recognize some pattern in these number.
Do you see a pattern? What is the pattern? Please respond back.
pka gave you the answer.I think the pattern is multiplying numbers ( 1, 2, 3, 4, etc.) with the same number.
i'm not sure though
Yes, the pattern involves squaring, which is the same as multiplying a number by itself.I think the pattern is multiplying numbers ( 1, 2, 3, 4, etc.) with the same number.
i'm not sure though
Yes I got itYes, the pattern involves squaring, which is the same as multiplying a number by itself.
It also involves putting that in the denominator (dividing 1 by the square of the index, which is 1 for the first term, 2 for the second, and so on).
So the 14th term is 1/142, which you can calculate, as you did for post #7.