
Sequences are ordered lists of numbers created by following a pattern.
Two of the most important types of sequences in Algebra 2, Precalculus, and Calculus BC foundations are:
Arithmetic sequences
Geometric sequences
These appear in growth models, series, and early steps of infinite sum problems.
A sequence is a list of numbers written in order:
$$a_{1} , a_{2} , a_{3} , \dots$$
Each number is called a term.
A formula for the nth term is called a general term or explicit formula.
A sequence is arithmetic when the difference between consecutive terms is constant.
This constant is called the common difference:
$$d=a_{n+1}-a_{n}$$
Examples:
sequence $$3 , 7 , 11 , 15 , \dots$$ , common difference d = 7 – 3 = 4
sequence $$20 , 17 , 14 , 11 , \dots$$ , common difference d = 17 – 20 = -3
$$a_{n}=a_{1}+(n+1)d$$
This gives any term directly.
Example
Arithmetic sequence: 5, 9, 13, 17, …
Here, $$a_{1}=first term=5 , common difference d = 9 – 5 = 4$$
$$a_{n}=5+(n-1)\cdot4=4n+1$$
A sequence is geometric when the ratio between consecutive terms is constant.
This constant is the common ratio:
$$r=\frac{a_{n+1}}{a_{n}}$$
Examples:
sequence $$3 , 6 , 12 , 24 , \dots$$ common ratio r =$$\frac{6}{3}=2$$
sequence $$81 , 27 , 9 , 3 , \dots$$ common ratio r =$$\frac{27}{81}=\frac{1}{3}$$
$$a_{n}=a_{1}r^{n-1}$$
Example
Sequence: 2, 8, 32, 128, … $$a_{1}=2 common ratio r = \frac{8}{2}=4$$
$$a_{n}=2\cdot4^{n-1}$$
Example: You save $20 each week → arithmetic pattern.
Example: Population increases 5% per year, or radioactive decay → geometric pattern.
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