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Write an equation to describe the sequence below. Use n to represent the position of a term in the sequence, where n = 1 for th...Question
Write an equation to describe the sequence below.Use n to represent the position of a term in the sequence,where n = 1 for the first term.
1, 4, 16,
Write your answer using decimals and integers.
an = __ (__)n-1
1, 4, 16,
Write your answer using decimals and integers.
an = __ (__)n-1
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To describe the sequence 1, 4, 16, we first recognize the pattern in the terms.
1 can be rewritten as \( 1^2 \) (which is 1),
4 can be rewritten as \( 2^2 \) (which is 4),
16 can be rewritten as \( 4^2 \) (which is 16).
More generally, we can observe that the terms are actually powers of 4:
- The first term (n=1) is \( 4^{(1-1)} = 4^0 = 1 \)
- The second term (n=2) is \( 4^{(2-1)} = 4^1 = 4 \)
- The third term (n=3) is \( 4^{(3-1)} = 4^2 = 16 \)
From this observation, we can derive the equation for the sequence:
\[
a_n = 4^{(n-1)}
\]
So, using the specified format:
\[
a_n = 4^{(n-1)}
\]
1 can be rewritten as \( 1^2 \) (which is 1),
4 can be rewritten as \( 2^2 \) (which is 4),
16 can be rewritten as \( 4^2 \) (which is 16).
More generally, we can observe that the terms are actually powers of 4:
- The first term (n=1) is \( 4^{(1-1)} = 4^0 = 1 \)
- The second term (n=2) is \( 4^{(2-1)} = 4^1 = 4 \)
- The third term (n=3) is \( 4^{(3-1)} = 4^2 = 16 \)
From this observation, we can derive the equation for the sequence:
\[
a_n = 4^{(n-1)}
\]
So, using the specified format:
\[
a_n = 4^{(n-1)}
\]
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