ahniyahfox222
ahniyahfox222 ahniyahfox222
  • 02-09-2021
  • Mathematics
contestada

What are the first five terms of sequence a(1)=1,a(n)=3•a(n-1)

Respuesta :

mathslover97
mathslover97 mathslover97
  • 02-09-2021

Answer:

We know that a(1)=1

a(1)=3*1(1-1)=3*1*0=3*0=0 (any no.multiplied by 0 is equal to 0)

a(2)=3*2(2-1)=3*2*1=6*1=6

Similarly,

a(3)=18

a(4)=36

a(5)=60

Hence, the first five terms of sequence a(n)=3*a(n-1), where a(1)=1 are 0,6,18,36,60.

Thanks for reading.

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

what is 5 divided by 312 in the long way
Article One of the Constitution illustrates how the national government's power is (4 points) Select one: a. derived from the states and the people b. granted t
When you go to the market, what can you use as a guide to learn the number of calories in foods? A. Frozen foods always have fewer calories than canned foods, s
(x - y)^2 + 4z(x - y) +3z^2 (and btw ^2 means squared and this is going for 10 points)
How are proteins and nucleic acids related? A.) They both provide energy. B.) They both carry genetic information. C.) The structure of proteins is determined b
What's the. Value of 3 in 230, 001
Solve each equation for the indicated variable T=an+b (solve for B)
An amoeba eats some food. Which organelles will help store and digest it? vacuoles and lysosomes mitochondria and ribosome endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi a
what does insignificant mean
Which is bigger: 0.3 or 1/3