Cambridge International AS and A Level Mathematics Pure Mathematics 1

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Arithmetic progressions


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arithmetic progressions


Any ordered set of numbers, like the scores of this golfer on an 18-hole round
(see figure 3.1) form a sequence. In mathematics, we are particularly interested
in those which have a well-defined pattern, often in the form of an algebraic
formula linking the terms. The sequences you met at the start of this chapter
show various types of pattern.
A sequence in which the terms increase by the addition of a fixed amount (or
decrease by the subtraction of a fixed amount), is described as arithmetic. The
increase from one term to the next is called the common difference.
Thus the sequence 5 8 11 14... is arithmetic with
+ 3 + 3 + 3
common difference 3.
This sequence can be written algebraically as
uk = 2 + 3k for k = 1, 2, 3, ...
When k = 1, u 1 = 2 + 3 = 5
k = 2, u 2 = 2 + 6 = 8
k = 3, u 3 = 2 + 9 = 11
and so on.
(An equivalent way of writing this is uk = 5 + 3(k − 1) for k = 1, 2, 3, ... .)
As successive terms of an arithmetic sequence increase (or decrease) by a fixed
amount called the common difference, d, you can define each term in the
sequence in relation to the previous term:
uk+1 = uk + d.
When the terms of an arithmetic sequence are added together, the sum is called
an arithmetic progression, often abbreviated to A.P. An alternative name is an
arithmetic series.

Figure 3.1

  


This version has the
advantage that the right-hand
side begins with the first term
of the sequence.
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