Solutions to Try Its
1. The sequence is not geometric because 105≠1510 .
2. The sequence is geometric. The common ratio is 15 .
3. {18,6,2,23,29}
4. a1=2an=23an−1 for n≥2
5. a6=16,384
6. an=−(−3)n−1
7. a. Pn=293⋅1.026an
b. The number of hits will be about 333.
Solutions to Odd-Numbered Exercises
1. A sequence in which the ratio between any two consecutive terms is constant.
3. Divide each term in a sequence by the preceding term. If the resulting quotients are equal, then the sequence is geometric.
5. Both geometric sequences and exponential functions have a constant ratio. However, their domains are not the same. Exponential functions are defined for all real numbers, and geometric sequences are defined only for positive integers. Another difference is that the base of a geometric sequence (the common ratio) can be negative, but the base of an exponential function must be positive.
7. The common ratio is −2
9. The sequence is geometric. The common ratio is 2.
11. The sequence is geometric. The common ratio is −12.
13. The sequence is geometric. The common ratio is 5.
15. 5,1,15,125,1125
17. 800,400,200,100,50
19. a4=−1627
21. a7=−2729
23. 7,1.4,0.28,0.056,0.0112
25. a1=−32,an=12an−1
27. a1=10,an=−0.3an−1
29. a1=35,an=16an−1
31. a1=1512,an=−4an−1
33. 12,−6,3,−32,34
35. an=3n−1
37. an=0.8⋅(−5)n−1
39. an=−(45)n−1
41. an=3⋅(−13)n−1
43. a12=1177,147
45. There are 12 terms in the sequence.
47. The graph does not represent a geometric sequence.
49.
51. Answers will vary. Examples: a1=800,an=0.5an−1 and a1=12.5,an=4an−1
53. a5=256b
55. The sequence exceeds 100 at the 14th term, a14≈107.
57. a4=−323 is the first non-integer value
59. Answers will vary. Example: Explicit formula with a decimal common ratio: an=400⋅0.5n−1; First 4 terms: 400,200,100,50;a8=3.125
Candela Citations
- Precalculus. Authored by: OpenStax College. Provided by: OpenStax. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/fd53eae1-fa23-47c7-bb1b-972349835c3c@5.175:1/Preface. License: CC BY: Attribution