roshan2004
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How to find nth term of the sequence 6+13+24+39+...
The nth term of the sequence 6, 13, 24, 39 can be determined using Newton's divided difference formula, resulting in the quadratic expression 2n^2 + 5n + 6. The first differences of the sequence are 7, 11, and 15, with constant second differences of 4, confirming the quadratic nature of the sequence. The formula can also be expressed as 2(n-1)^2 + 5(n-1) + 6, which simplifies to the same quadratic expression. Understanding the sequence generation requires clarity on whether the focus is on the nth term or the nth partial sum.
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Any reason why you didn't tell us that before? As Simon Bridge said, there are infinitely many different sequences that start out "6, 13, 24, 39". We might have noticed that 13- 6= 7, 24- 13= 11, 39- 24= 15 so that the "second differences" are 11- 7= 4 and 15- 11= 4 but there is no way of knowing that is always true without being told.roshan2004 said:It is actually 6,13,24,39...Their differences are in Arithmetic progression
roshan2004 said:nth term of the sequence 6+13+24+39+...