Math Grade 9-12

Precalculus: Arithmetic and Geometric Sequences

Finding terms, formulas, and sums for common sequence patterns

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Finding terms, formulas, and sums for common sequence patterns

Math - Grade 9-12

Instructions: Read each problem carefully. Show your work in the space provided. Give exact answers when possible.
  1. 1

    The sequence 7, 12, 17, 22, ... is arithmetic. Find the common difference and write an explicit formula for a_n.

  2. 2

    The sequence 3, 6, 12, 24, ... is geometric. Find the common ratio and write an explicit formula for a_n.

  3. 3

    Find the 25th term of the arithmetic sequence with a_1 = -4 and common difference d = 6.

  4. 4

    Find the 8th term of the geometric sequence with a_1 = 5 and common ratio r = -2.

  5. 5

    Determine whether the sequence 81, 27, 9, 3, 1, ... is arithmetic, geometric, or neither. Explain your reasoning.

  6. 6

    Determine whether the sequence 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, ... is arithmetic, geometric, or neither. Explain your reasoning.

  7. 7

    Write a recursive formula for the arithmetic sequence 15, 11, 7, 3, ...

  8. 8

    Write a recursive formula for the geometric sequence 2, -6, 18, -54, ...

  9. 9

    An arithmetic sequence has a_4 = 18 and a_10 = 42. Find a_1 and write an explicit formula for a_n.

  10. 10

    A geometric sequence has a_2 = 12 and a_5 = 324. If the common ratio is positive, find a_1 and write an explicit formula for a_n.

  11. 11

    Find the sum of the first 20 terms of the arithmetic sequence 8, 13, 18, 23, ...

  12. 12

    Find the sum of the first 7 terms of the geometric sequence 6, 18, 54, 162, ...

  13. 13
    Overhead diagram of theater rows with each row containing more seats than the row before.

    A theater has 18 seats in the first row, 22 seats in the second row, 26 seats in the third row, and so on. If there are 30 rows, how many seats are in the theater?

  14. 14
    Petri dishes showing bacteria clusters increasing rapidly over time.

    A population of bacteria starts at 500 and triples every hour. Write a formula for the population after n hours, where n = 0 represents the starting time, and find the population after 6 hours.

  15. 15

    A student saves $40 in week 1, $55 in week 2, $70 in week 3, and continues this pattern. How much will the student save in week 12, and what is the total amount saved over the 12 weeks?

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