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The second and fourth terms of a sequence are 64 and 100. If the sequence is arithmetic, write an equation for

the nth term.

User Letholdrus
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1 Answer

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If d is the common difference between consecutive terms, then


a_4 = a_3 + d = a_2 + 2d

We have
a_2 = 64 and
a_4 = 100, so


a_4 - a_2 = 100 - 64 = 36 = 2d \implies d = 18

Then the 1st term in the sequence is


a_2 = a_1 + d \implies 64 = a_1 + 18 \implies a_1 = 46

and the n-th term would be


a_n = a_1 + (n-1) d \implies a_n = 46 + 18 (n-1) \implies \boxed{a_n = 18n + 28}

User Gourav Joshi
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