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The first five terms of an arithmetic sequence are 5, 11, 17, 23, 29. What is the rule for the nth term of this sequence?

The first five terms of an arithmetic sequence are 5, 11, 17, 23, 29. What is the-example-1
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User Skomisa
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2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

53

Explanation:

Since each number is getting 6 added to it, you need to multiply the increment times how many more numbers there are. So for this, you need to multiply 6 x 4 to get 24. You now add 24 to 29 to get 53.

answered
User Moller Rodrigues
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7.7k points
9 votes

Answer:

a'n=6n-1

Explanation:

If you plug in each value like value two for example it will match.

a'2=6(2) - 1 = 11

Hope this helps!

answered
User Bbunmp
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7.4k points

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