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Mellonie

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1. How many terms of the serious 9 + 18 + 36 + ... are needed to gve sum of 1143




2. n=1 Signma notation n=8 16(.75)^(n-1) {without writing the whole thing out from n=1 to n=8 like it can be done with just sum of n terms formula right..}



Their easy but i dunno y i'm not getting the answer... maybe the book is wrong so yer check it for me plz
 
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skyrockets1530

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Mellonie said:
How many terms of the serious 9 + 18 + 36 + ... areneeded to gve sum of 143

n=1 Signma notation n=8 16(.75)^(n-1) {without writing the whole thing out from n=1 to n=8 like it can be done with just sum of n terms formula right..}



Their easy but i dunno y i'm not getting the answer... maybe the book is wrong so yer check it for me plz

S = [a(rn - 1)]/(r - 1)
r = 2, a=9, S=143
143 = [9(2n - 1)]/(2 - 1)
143 = 9(2n - 1)
143/9 = 2n - 1
152/9 = 2n
ln(152/9) = nln2
n=4.08
you cant really have a partial term of a series, but that seems to be right
 
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Mellonie

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yer hey thanx i figured it out.. my formula was wrong
 
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word.

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because 143/9 + 1 = 152/9...

q2.
n=8
Sigma 16(.75)^(n-1)
n=1

= 16 + 16(0.75) + ... + 16(0.75)7

a = 16, r = 0.75, n = 8
etc
 
I

icycloud

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Mellonie said:
1. How many terms of the serious 9 + 18 + 36 + ... are needed to gve sum of 1143
This is a geometric series with first term of 9 and common ratio of 2. Thus,

a = 9, r = 2

Sn = a(rn-1) / (r-1)
= 9(2n-1)
>= 143

Thus, 9(2n-1) >= 143
2n >= 143/9 + 1
n ln(2) >= ln(152/9)
n >= ln(152/9) / ln(2)
>= 4.07800.......

But n is an integer, therefore, n = 5
Thus, 5 terms are necessary for the sum to approach 143.


Mellonie said:
2. n=1 Signma notation n=8 16(.75)^(n-1) {without writing the whole thing out from n=1 to n=8 like it can be done with just sum of n terms formula right..}
See word.'s solution above.
 

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