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Chapter 6

This document discusses sequences, summations, conjectures, mathematical induction, and recursion. It provides examples of writing sequences in summation notation and finding terms, conjectures, and sums. It also demonstrates proving conjectures using mathematical induction and defining sequences recursively through recursive formulas.

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Ira Lyana
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views

Chapter 6

This document discusses sequences, summations, conjectures, mathematical induction, and recursion. It provides examples of writing sequences in summation notation and finding terms, conjectures, and sums. It also demonstrates proving conjectures using mathematical induction and defining sequences recursively through recursive formulas.

Uploaded by

Ira Lyana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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INDUCTION & RECURSION

CHAPTER 6

AZLINAJUMADI_MARCH2018
SEQUENCE
• A Sequence is a list of things (usually numbers) that are in order.

• a1 = 1 st term, a2 = 2nd term, a3 = 3rd term, …, an = the nth term


SUMMATIONS
• Summations or series are the sum of some or all terms in a sequence. 
• Given the sequence: a1, a2, …, an, …. The corresponding summation is
a1 + a2 + … + an + …
•  However, insteadn of writing: a1 + a2 + a3 + a4 + …, we'll write:

a
i m
i  am  am 1  ...  an
• The variable i is referred to as the index of summation.
• m is the lower limit and n is the upper limit of the summation.
SUMMATIONS
• Example: Given a sequence 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, …. Write the given sequences in
summation symbol. Hence, find: i ai Pattern
1 1 1²
a) the 3rd term, 9
2 4 2²
b) the 8th term, 64 n

i
3 9 3²
2
c) the n term.
th
n² 4 16 4²
i 1 5 25 5²
… … …
n an n²
SUMMATIONS
• Example: Given a sequence 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, …. Write the given sequences in summation
symbol. Hence, find: i ai Pattern
a) the 3rd term, 1 1 2(1)-1
5 2 3 2(2)-1
b) the 6th term, 11 n 3 5 2(3)-1
c) the nth term. 2n - 1
 2i  1
i 1
4
5
7
9
2(4)-1
2(5)-1
… … …
n an 2(n)-1
SUMMATIONS
• Example: Write the given sequences below in summation symbol.
  𝑛
𝑖 −1
a) 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, … ∑2
𝑖=1

  𝑛
b) 3, 5, 7, 9, … ∑ 2 𝑖+1
𝑖=1
SUMMATIONS
• Example:
  Find the first four terms for the following sequence. Hence, find their summations.
 𝑛
−1 𝑖
∑ 𝑖
𝑖=1
( )
a1 =  = -1
a2 =  = -1 + + +
a3 =  =
a4 =  =
CONJECTURE
• A conjecture is a mathematical statement that has not yet been rigorously
proved.
• Conjectures arise when one notices a pattern that holds true for many
cases. However, just because a pattern holds true for many cases does not
mean that the pattern will hold true for all cases.
• Conjectures must be proved for the mathematical observation to be fully
accepted. When a conjecture is rigorously proved, it becomes a theorem.
CONJECTURE
Find the conjecture for the following sequence: 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, …
i Summation Form Another Form
1 1 1 1²
 𝑛
2 4 1+3 2² 2

3 9 1+3+5 3²
Conjecture: ∑ ( 2 𝑖 −1 )=𝑛
𝑖=1
4 16 1+3+5+7 4²   for all integers .
5 25 1+3+5+7+9 5²
… … …
n 1+3+5+7+9+…+(2n-1) n²
CONJECTURE
Find the conjecture for the following sequence: 2, 6, 12, 20, 30, …
i Summation Form Another Form
1 2 2
  𝑛
2 6 2+4 Conjecture:
3 12 2+4+6 ∑ 2 𝑖=𝑛 ( 𝑛+1 )
𝑖=1
4 20 2+4+6+8   for all integers .
5 30 2+4+6+8+10
… … …
n 2+4+6+8+10+…+(2n)
CONJECTURE
Find the conjecture for the following sequence: 1, 3, 7, 15, 31, …
i Summation Form Another Form
Conjecture:
1 1 1
  𝑛
2 3 1+2
𝑖 −1 𝑛
3
4
7
15
1+2+4
1+2+4+8
∑ (2 ) =2 −1  
𝑖=1
5 31 1+2+4+8+16
  for all integers .
… … …
n 1+2+4+8+16+…+()
MATHEMATICAL INDUCTION
• Mathematical Induction is a special way of proving things.
• It has only 2 steps.
• Step 1. Show it is true for the first one
• Step 2. Show that if any one is true then the next one is true
• Then all are true
MATHEMATICAL INDUCTION
• Mathematically:
1) Define P(n)
2) Step 1. P(1) is true.
3) Define P(k). Assume P(k) is true.
4) Step 2. Prove P(k+1) is also true.
5) Therefore, P(n) is true.
MATHEMATICAL INDUCTION
•  Example:
Use the principle of mathematical Induction to prove that the statement
below is true for all integers .
MATHEMATICAL INDUCTION
•  Example:
Use principle of mathematical induction to prove that the conjecture
below is true for .
MATHEMATICAL INDUCTION
•  Example:
Use the principle of mathematical Induction to prove that the following
conjecture is true for all .
Hence, evaluate .
RECURSIVE
• Sometimes it is possible to define an object (function, sequence,
algorithm, structure) in terms of itself. This process is called recursion.
RECURSIVE
•  Example:
Given the following sequence:

  a) List the first four terms of sequence. -2, -4, -6, -8, …
b) Give the recursive formula for that sequence.
𝟏 =− 𝟐 , 𝒂 𝒏 =𝒂 𝒏 −𝟏 − 𝟐 , 𝒏 ≥ 𝟐 , 𝒏 ∈ 𝒁
+¿ ¿
 𝒂
RECURSIVE
•  Example:
Find the recursive formula for the following sequence.

𝟏 =𝟎 . 𝟐𝟓 , 𝒂𝒏 =− 𝟐 𝒂 𝒏− 𝟏 , 𝒏 ≥ 𝟐 ,𝒏 ∈ 𝒁
+¿ ¿
 𝒂
RECURSIVE
•  Example:
The integer sequence is defined recursively by:

a) List the first


4
four terms of the sequence. 4, 11, 25, 53, …
 
b) Compute ∑ 𝑎𝑖 . 93
𝑖=1
RECURSIVE
•  Example:
Given a recursive sequence where

List the first five terms.

-5, 7, -9, 11, -13, …

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