Final answer:
To find the nth term of a constant velocity sequence, the correct formula to use is aₙ = a₁ + (n-1)d, representing an arithmetic sequence where 'd' is the constant velocity.
Step-by-step explanation:
To find the nth term of a constant velocity sequence, we would want an equation that defines a sequence which increments by a constant amount each time. A constant velocity sequence is essentially an arithmetic sequence, because the distance covered between each consecutive term is the same, much like how arithmetic sequences have a common difference. Thus, the correct formula to use is an = a1 + (n-1)d, where an is the nth term, a1 is the first term, n is the term number, and d is the common difference (constant velocity in this context).
Let's go through each option:
- (a) an = a1 + (n-1)d correctly represents an arithmetic sequence, which is what a constant velocity sequence would be mathematically equivalent to.
- (b) an = a1 × r(n-1) is the formula for a geometric sequence, not appropriate for constant velocity.
- (c) an = a1 + nr assumes the velocity increases by nr each time, which is not constant.
- (d) an = a1 ÷ (n-1) suggests division per term which isn't relevant to constant velocity or arithmetic sequences.