67.7k views
1 vote
Please Help Quickly!!


The ancient Greeks were very interested in number patterns.

Please Help Quickly!! The ancient Greeks were very interested in number patterns.-example-1
User Jpoz
by
8.5k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

C) a(n) = ⁿ⁽ⁿ ⁺ ¹⁾/₂

Explanation:

We can plug in, for example, 1 for n. And if n = 1, since it is the first number of the sequence, the new number should also be 1.

A) 2 * n --> 2 * 1 --> 2; 2 ≠ 1, so A is incorrect.

B) n²/2 --> 1²/2 --> 1/2; 1/2 ≠ 1, so B is also incorrect.

C) 1(1 + 1)/2 --> 2/2 --> 1; 1 = 1, so C could be correct.

D) (1 + 1)/2 --> 2/2 --> 1; 1 = 1, so D could be correct.

Since either C or D could be correct, we can plug in n = 2 to see if it will be 3.

C) 2(2 + 1)/2 --> 6/2 --> 3; 3 = 3, so C could be correct.

D) (2 + 1)/2 --> 3/2 --> 3/2 ≠ 3, so D is not correct.

From this, we can conclude that C is the correct answer.

User SimplyComplexable
by
8.2k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories