Math, asked by Tanish81835, 8 months ago

Q. The sequence of numbers -10, -6, - 2. 2.,... is
(A) an AP with d = -16
(B) an AP with d = -4
(C) an AP With d = 4
(D) not an AP​

Answers

Answered by devil9275
1

Answer:

Notice that each term is equal to

the previous term

×

2

By multiplying the starting number by -2 multiple times, you can find any term in the sequence.

In other words, by multiplying the starting number by some power of 2, you can find the number in the sequence that is that many terms past the starting number.

For the first term, recall that any number to the 0 power = 1. So, starting with 4, the 1st term, we can say that the first term =

4

×

2

0

=

4

×

1

=

4

For the third term,

4

×

2

2

=

4

×

4

=

16

Notice that the exponent we raise -2 to is one less than the number of the term we want to find:

q

1

.

So, for the

q

th term, the equation to find it is

4

×

2

q

1

If you would like another example, here is how to find the 8th term:

4

×

2

8

1

=

4

×

2

7

=

4

×

128

=

512

Answered by Himanidaga
11

Answer:

c) An Ap with d = 4

Step-by-step explanation:

hope it helps you!!

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