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Using arithmetic sequences formulas

Sal finds terms of arithmetic sequences using their explicit and recursive formulas.

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  • aqualine sapling style avatar for user Frenchy Starfire (I'm offiline so don't try anything funny XD)
    To the people of Khan academy,
    I get the concept of what they are asking you to determine here but I seriously don't get how to do it I have been stuck on this one subject for almost three months and I have gotten so many answers right and then comes my last questions before I am done with the subject and somehow I get it wrong I don't know if its the way I am doing the work right or if I have just been doing it all wrong and getting the answers right out of luck. Three months is a little long to be working on this exact thing because I have other things to do and my coach has assigned me this exact thing a couple of months ago so I can't just delete it completly from my assignments because she would know and then I would have to do it again! I am hoping that someone could please explain exactly how to do this arthemetic sequence stuff because its so confusing and drives me crazy!
    -Thanks so much
    🌟Starfire🌟 (The pop culture geek) 😎
    (37 votes)
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    • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user Woohoo
      Well, it's too late for me to reply, but you should not look at it like that (frustrating). Breath, watch the video, listen in class, and most importantly, forget what you have learned and just relearn it because that's what you're probably doing wrong. It means nothing if you are practicing it, but doing it wrong, you can practice it for days, weeks months, but if you're doing it wrong, you'll never understand it.
      - Me giving this answer because I don't know how to help you exactly, especially when 4 years have passed and your offline.
      (15 votes)
  • leaf blue style avatar for user Smit
    The video sort of makes sense, but when I try the problems I get wildly wrong answers. How does one make sense of this.
    (15 votes)
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  • starky ultimate style avatar for user Anish
    The second question can also be done as follows:
    Given:
    a1 = -7
    ai = a(i-1) -2
    => common difference = d = -2
    We know that:
    an = a1 + (n-1)d
    => a5 = -7 + (4)-2 = -7 - 8 = -15
    (4 votes)
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  • duskpin ultimate style avatar for user Ellie
    If you're given two successive terms, say 13 and 18, how do you find the 50th term? Can I make an equation like is given in the first problem?
    (2 votes)
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    • mr pants teal style avatar for user VincentTheFrugal
      There isn't a way to find the 50th term if you are only given two terms. You need at least 3 terms to be able to know what the pattern is.

      In another answer, they say that you can just add 5 to the previous term to find the next term. However, it's just as valid to say you can multiply by 18/13 to get the next term. Or you can say you add 5*(the placement of the number) to get the next number (which would lead to 13, 18, 28, 43). While "adding 5 to the previous number" is probably the pattern, it doesn't have to be, and you shouldn't assume that it is on a test... or in real life.
      (4 votes)
  • aqualine tree style avatar for user audrey
    Is there a short cut to this? Let's say we had the same equations, but instead of looking for the 5th term, we were to look for the 16th term? It would take a really long time to get there, and this method is pretty slow.
    (3 votes)
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  • hopper cool style avatar for user Kailash Shankar R
    Is it possible that I have this formula written as a(sub)i = -7 - 2(i-1)?
    (3 votes)
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  • starky tree style avatar for user Athens, Adah
    why are there random numbers whyyy please explain what is happeninnng
    (3 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Indira Trace
    I understand the Recursive Formula, but is there a faster way do do it??
    (2 votes)
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  • male robot hal style avatar for user johnnyman242
    I got the problem a(n)=-6-4(n-1) Find the fourth term in sequence.
    I got (-)30, but it said the answer is (-)18.
    Heres my reasoning:
    (4-1)=3
    -6-4 =-10
    -10*3=-30

    Please help me. Thank you!
    (2 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Stephen
    Where does the -1 come from? We are adding in order to be in a sequence.
    (2 votes)
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    • blobby green style avatar for user glassfordelle
      The -1 comes from trying to get the number before. i.e in the recursive formula, you are adding/subtracting x amount from the term before. So, to get to term 20, you add something to term 19. This is why n-1 is needed. This is also why you need to know the first term in the sequence for the recursive formula.
      (3 votes)

Video transcript

- [Voiceover] All right, we're told that the arithmetic sequence a-sub-i is defined by the formula where the ith term in the sequence is going to be 4 plus 3 times i minus 1. What is a-sub-20? And so a-sub-20 is the 20th term in the sequence and I encourage you to pause the video and figure out what is the 20th term? Well, we can just think about it like this. A-sub-20, we just use this definition of the ith term. Everywhere we see an i, we would put a 20 in, so it's going to be 4 plus 3 times 20 minus 1, so once again, just to be clear, a-sub-20, where instead of a-sub-i, wherever we saw an i, we put a 20, and now we can just compute what this is going to be equal to. This is going to be equal to 4 plus 3 times 20 minus 1 is 19. 3 times 19, let's see, 3 times 19 is 57, right? It's 30 plus 27, yep. This is 57, and 4 plus 57 is equal to 61, so the 20th term in this arithmetic sequence is going to be 61. Let's do another one of these. And here, they've told us the arithmetic sequence a-sub-i is defined by the formula a-sub-1, they gave us the first term, and they say, every other term, so a-sub-i, they're defining it in terms of the previous terms, so a-sub-i is going to be a-sub-i minus 1 minus 2, so this is actually a recursive definition of our arithmetic sequence. Let's see what we can make of this, so a-sub-5, a-sub-5 is going to be equal to, we'll use this second line right here, a-sub-5 is going to be equal to a-sub-4 minus 2. Well, we don't know what a-sub-4 is just yet, so let's try to figure that out. So we could say that a-sub-4 is equal to, well if we use the second line again, it's going to be a-sub-3, minus 2. We still don't know what a-sub-3 is. I'll keep switching colors 'cause it looks nice. A-sub-3 is going to be equal to a-sub-3 minus 1, so a-sub-2 minus 2. We still don't know what a-sub-2 is, and so, we could write, a-sub-2 is equal to a-sub-2 minus 1, so that's a-sub-1 minus 2. Now, luckily we know what a-sub-1 is. A-sub-1 is negative 7. A-sub-1 is negative 7, so if this is negative 7, then a-sub-2 is negative 7 minus 2, which is equal to negative 9. Well that starts helping us out because if a-sub-2 is negative 9, if this is negative 9, then a-sub-3 is negative 9 minus 2, which is equal to negative 11. Well now that we know that a-sub-3 is negative 11, so this is negative 11, we could figure out a-sub-4 is negative 11 minus 2, which is equal to negative 13. And we're almost there. We know a-sub-4, the fourth term in this arithmetic sequence is negative 13, so, we can now, so if this is negative 13, a-sub-5 is going to be a-sub-4, which is negative 13 minus 2, which is equal to negative 15, so the fifth term in the sequence is negative 15. And we're all done.