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Sequence and Series (1 Viewer)

boogerboy999

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Hey guys, i was wondering if you could help me out on this Q:

Given a geometric sequence whose sum of the first 10 terms is 4 and whose sum from the 11th to the 30th term is 48, find the sum from the 31st to the 60th term.

Im kinda stuck at the moment :S
 

Timothy.Siu

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boogerboy999 said:
Hey guys, i was wondering if you could help me out on this Q:

Given a geometric sequence whose sum of the first 10 terms is 4 and whose sum from the 11th to the 30th term is 48, find the sum from the 31st to the 60th term.

Im kinda stuck at the moment :S
is it 1404?
i'm not sure if i did it correctly, it seemed pretty complicated...
i did the geometric sums for the first 10 terms and geometric sum of the first 30 terms in terms of A and R, then i managed to use them simulatenously to form a 3 degree polynomial and solve it...
 
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boogerboy999

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hmm
for the 1st ten numbers: S=a(r^10 -1)/(r-1)=4
for the 1st 30 numbers: S= a(r^30 -1)/(r-1)=48+4=52

so i divided them and got: (r^30-1)/(r^10-1)=13

now im stuck again xD

Edit: Ive got it solved:
Sum between 31-60= Sum60-Sum30
and work it out from there :)

The final answer i got was 52X1728=89856

Courtesy of JRAHS maths problems XD
 
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Trebla

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boogerboy999 said:
Hey guys, i was wondering if you could help me out on this Q:

Given a geometric sequence whose sum of the first 10 terms is 4 and whose sum from the 11th to the 30th term is 48, find the sum from the 31st to the 60th term.

Im kinda stuck at the moment :S
We want: S60 - S30

S10 = 4
.: a(r10 - 1) / (r - 1) = 4

S30 - S10 = 48
=> S30 = 52
.: a(r30 - 1) / (r - 1) = 52

Dividing the two expressions:
(r30 - 1) / (r10 - 1) = 52/4
(r10 - 1)(r20 + r10 + 1) / (r10 - 1) = 13
r20 + r10 + 1 = 13
r20 + r10 - 12 = 0
(r10 + 4)(r10 - 3) = 0
r10 = 3 or r10 = - 4
Obviously r10 = 3 only because a real number raised to an even power is always positive

S60 = a(r60 - 1) / (r - 1)
= a(r30 - 1)(r30 + 1) / (r - 1)
= 52(r30 + 1)
= 52((r10)3 + 1)
= 52((3)3 + 1)
= 1456

.: S60 - S30 = 1456 - 52 = 1404
 

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