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Use Σ notation. Use the summation forμlas to rewrite the expression without the summation notation. (sumⱼ=5ⁿ (3j²))

a) (3sumⱼ=5ⁿj²)
b) (sumⱼ=5ⁿ(3j)²)
c) (3sumⱼ=5ⁿjsumⱼ=5ⁿj)
d) (sumⱼ=5ⁿ(3j)²)

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User Gargsms
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Final answer:

The expression Σₗ=5ⁿ (3j²) is correctly rewritten using summation formulas as (3Σₗ=5ⁿj²), which factors out the constant 3 from the summation over j².

Step-by-step explanation:

The goal is to rewrite the sum Σₗ=5ⁿ (3j²) using summation formulas. The correct reformulation using summation notation is option (a), which represents the sum of the squares of each term multiplied by 3, that is, (3Σₗ=5ⁿj²).

To see why, let's consider that multiplying each term in the summation by a constant simply factors that constant out of the summation. So if our terms inside the summation are 3j², we can take out the constant 3 and leave the summation over j², which is exactly what option (a) shows.

The other options either manipulate the summation incorrectly or represent a different mathematical expression. For example, option (b) squares the entire term 3j, option (c) is a multiplication of two different summations, which is not equivalent to the original expression, and option (d) is the same mistake as option (b).

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User Amaters
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