222k views
3 votes
Find S100 for the arithmetic sequence 4, 17, 30, ....

1295
64,750
129,900
1,295,000
none of these

User Zemzela
by
5.2k points

1 Answer

3 votes

There's a difference of 13 between consecutive terms in the sequence, so that the
n-th term of the sequence is


a_n=4+13(n-1)=13n-9

Then the sum of the first 100 terms of the sequence is


S_(100)=\displaystyle\sum_(n=1)^(100)(13n-9)=13\sum_(n=1)^(100)n-9\sum_(n=1)^(100)1


S_(100)=13\frac{100\cdot101}2-9\cdot100


\boxed{S_(100)=64,750}

User Emtrane
by
5.5k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.