What is Sequence: Definition and 1000 Discussions

In mathematics, a sequence is an enumerated collection of objects in which repetitions are allowed and order matters. Like a set, it contains members (also called elements, or terms). The number of elements (possibly infinite) is called the length of the sequence. Unlike a set, the same elements can appear multiple times at different positions in a sequence, and unlike a set, the order does matter. Formally, a sequence can be defined as a function whose domain is either the set of the natural numbers (for infinite sequences), or the set of the first n natural numbers (for a sequence of finite length n). Sequences are one type of indexed families as an indexed family is defined as a function which domain is called the index set, and the elements of the index set are the indices for the elements of the function image.
For example, (M, A, R, Y) is a sequence of letters with the letter 'M' first and 'Y' last. This sequence differs from (A, R, M, Y). Also, the sequence (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8), which contains the number 1 at two different positions, is a valid sequence. Sequences can be finite, as in these examples, or infinite, such as the sequence of all even positive integers (2, 4, 6, ...).
The position of an element in a sequence is its rank or index; it is the natural number for which the element is the image. The first element has index 0 or 1, depending on the context or a specific convention. In mathematical analysis, a sequence is often denoted by letters in the form of




a

n




{\displaystyle a_{n}}
,




b

n




{\displaystyle b_{n}}
and




c

n




{\displaystyle c_{n}}
, where the subscript n refers to the nth element of the sequence; for example, the nth element of the Fibonacci sequence



F


{\displaystyle F}
is generally denoted as




F

n




{\displaystyle F_{n}}
.

In computing and computer science, finite sequences are sometimes called strings, words or lists, the different names commonly corresponding to different ways to represent them in computer memory; infinite sequences are called streams. The empty sequence ( ) is included in most notions of sequence, but may be excluded depending on the context.

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  1. A

    Trying to find the infinite sum of e^-x using integration

    Hello, I am well aware of the ratio method, and the sum = 1/(1-r) but I want to try this method. I am trying to understand this: \displaystyle \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} e^{-n} using integrals, what I have though: = \displaystyle \lim_{m\to\infty} \sum_{n=1}^{m} e^{-n} = \displaystyle...
  2. G

    Sequence (n)/(n^n) Convergent or Divergent and Limit?

    Homework Statement Is the sequence {(n!)/(n^n)} convergent or divergent. If it is convergent, find its limit. Homework Equations Usually with sequences, you just take the limit and if the limit isn't infinity, it converges... That doesn't really work here. I know I'm supposed to write out the...
  3. S

    MHB Find Nth Term of Sequence: (-1)^n

    I have been trying to find the nth term of the following sequence: -1, 5, -17, 65... I am thinking that the nth term has (-1) ^n . It doesn't appear to be a geometric or arithmetic sequence. I am stymied.
  4. A

    Determine Convergence/Divergence of Sequence (n^2/(2n+1) - (n^2/2n-1)

    Homework Statement Determine the convergence or divergence of the sequence with the given a_n . If it converges, find the limit. \displaystyle a_n = \frac{n^2}{(2n+1)} - \frac{n^2}{(2n-1)} The Attempt at a Solution [/B] I am not confident enough with sequence and series to know that I have...
  5. Benighted

    Sequence Limits: Difference of radicals

    Homework Statement Find the limit of the following sequence: Homework Equations \lim_{n \rightarrow + \infty} \sqrt[4] {2n + 1} - \sqrt[4] {n + 1} The Attempt at a Solution I've tried multiplying the first radical by ## \frac{ \sqrt[4] {2n - 1} } { \sqrt[4] {2n - 1} } ## to make the radical...
  6. Albert1

    MHB Solution to Sequence Challenge $a_n$

    $a_1=2 ,$ and $a_{n+1}=\dfrac{a_n+4}{2a_n+3},\,\, n\in N$ find :$a_n$
  7. A

    Is sequence 1/(n-1) necessarily bounded?

    Homework Statement Courant states that a convergent sequence is necessarily bounded; that is, for all n, the absolute value of term an is less than or equal to some number M. My question is does this apply to the sequence given by an = 1/(n-1)? Homework Equations As n approaches infinity, an...
  8. anemone

    MHB Calculating $U_{513}$ of a Sequence Defined by Recurrence Relation

    Let $U_1,\,U_2,\,\cdots$ be a sequence defined by $U_1=1$ and for $n>1$, $U_{n+1}=\sqrt{U_n^2-2U_n+3}+1$. Find $U_{513}$.
  9. 2

    Answer to Sequence Problem: Eighth Term

    Homework Statement 36, 4, 20, ... The first term of the sequence above is 36, and the second term is 4. Each term after the second is the average (arithmetic mean) of the two preceding terms. Which term of the sequence is the first that is not an integer? a. the fourth term b. the...
  10. basheer uddin

    How do we get the n th term of the sequence?

    Homework Statement how do we get the n th term of a sequence if it is given in form of ##x_{ n+1 }=f({ x }_{ n })## and the p th term is given Homework Equations I figured we may get it if we get it in the form of ##x_{ n+1 }-{ x }_{ n }## but how?can we even get it?if yes,under...
  11. Shackleford

    What is the recursive formula for the sequence sn?

    Oddly enough, I don't remember doing a problem like. I have had a problem where I've been given the explicit formula and then asked to use induction to prove that it's correct. I think that I'm supposed to back-substitute sn into the recursion formula and go from there.
  12. P

    Finding general term of a sequence

    Homework Statement Find the general term of 0, 4, 22, 118, 718, 5038, 40318 if a1 = 0, a2 = 4 and so on. The Attempt at a Solution I have tried getting the differences between them, even going 4 levels deep, but that isn't working obviously, I tried seeing if the ratios are the...
  13. R

    MHB Next integer in this sequence, Challenge

    $\sqrt{\text{mbh}_{29}}$ Challenge: Sn = 3, 293, 7862, 32251, 7105061, 335283445, 12826573186, ?, ?, 44164106654163 S1 through S7 begin an infinite integer sequence, not found in OEIS. 1) Find S8 and S9. 2) Does S10 belong to Sn? 3) If S10 is incorrect, what is the correct value of S10...
  14. R

    Why is the sequence of infinitely many coin tosses uncountable?

    Hi everyone, I recently began a grad program and we have started taking a course in stochastic methods. However I can't figure out the answer to a question posed by the professor which is: http://i.imgur.com/dkdEDMo.jpg http://imgur.com/dkdEDMo He proved this by contradiction. It started...
  15. mnb96

    Obtaining recurrence relation from a given sequence

    Hello, it is known that given a certain recurrence relation that describes a sequence of numbers, it is often possible to obtain a function f[n] that directly yields the n-th number of the sequence. This is usually accomplished by using powerful techniques involving generating functions or the...
  16. H

    Convergence of a Recursive Sequence: Proving a_n*c*n\rightarrow 1 for Positive c

    I want to prove that if the sequence a_n satisfy that a_{n+1}=a_n\left(1-c\frac{a_n}{1+a_n}\right) then a_n*c*n\rightarrow 1 for all positive c. Like when c=1, then a_n*n\rightarrow 1, but if c\neq 1, it's difficult to prove.
  17. K

    Limit of a sequence (explanation)

    I kind of know what limits are, or at least believe I do: I think that a limit of a sequence is just an approximation/intuitive way to finding a number (if it exists) to which a sequence tends. For example, 1, 2, 3, 4... tends to +∞, while 1/10, 1/100, 1/1000... tends, "obviously/intuitively"...
  18. caffeinemachine

    MHB Theorem: If Polynomials Converge, Roots Also Converge

    Proposition 5.2.1 in Artin states that: THEOREM. Let $p_k(t)\in \mathbf C[t]$ be a sequence of monic polynomials of degree $\leq n$, and let $p(t)\in \mathbf C[t]$ be another monic polynomial of degree $n$. Let $\alpha_{k,1},\ldots,\alpha_{k,n}$ and $\alpha_1,\ldots,\alpha_n$ be the roots...
  19. anemone

    MHB What is the result of evaluating this sequence challenge?

    A sequence of integers ${x_i}$ is defined as follows: $x_i=i$ for all $1<i<5$ and $x_i=(x_1x_2\cdots x_{i-1})-1$ for $i>5$. Evaluate $\displaystyle x_1x_2\cdots x_{2011}-\sum_{i=1}^{2011} (x_i)^2$.
  20. S

    Prove that a convergent sequence is bounded

    Homework Statement The problem and solution are attached as TheProblemAndSolution.jpg. Homework Equations Definition of the limit of a sequence. The Attempt at a Solution I understand how P = ϵ + |A| can be seen as an upper bound that proves that the sequence is bounded, but for the last bit...
  21. C

    Finding the limit of a sequence

    Homework Statement How do you determine if the limit of (1+1/n^2)^(n^2) exists and what it is? This cannot use logarithms at any point. Homework Equations (1+1/n)^n --> e The Attempt at a Solution Let N=n^2 Given (1+1/N)^N --> e, then (1+1/n^2)^(n^2) must --> e also. Is...
  22. Dethrone

    MHB Is sequence 2^n/n increasing or decreasing?

    I'm starting sequences and series, and I have to prove that the following is increasing, nonincreasing, decreasing, or nondecreasing. $$S_n = \frac{2^n}{n!}$$ I've tried $S_{n+1}-S_n >$ or $<$ than $0$, $\frac{S_{n+1}}{S_n}$, and I don't think I've learned differentiating factorials so I...
  23. S

    Confirm limit of this sequence by using definition of limit

    Homework Statement I'm referring to the question and solution for part (b) in the attached TheProblemAndSolution.jpg file. Homework Equations Definition of limit. The Attempt at a Solution Should the equation with the two things in brackets have absolute value bars instead of brackets...
  24. Government$

    Sequence problems - solution check

    Homework Statement Let $$(a_n)$$ be a sequence such that $$\lim_{n\rightarrow +\infty}n(a_n)=0$$. 1) What is $$\lim_{n\rightarrow +\infty}(1 + {\frac{1}{n}} + (a_n))^n$$ 2) For which value of p and l, after some n is $$(b_n)=\frac{n^{p \ cos(n\pi)}}{(1 + l + (a_n))^n}$$ properly defined. p...
  25. T

    Showing a sequence converges to 0

    Show that 2^n/n! Converges to 0 by showing that 2^n/n! <= 4/n My problem is in showing 2^n/n! <= 4/n I know 4/n goez to 0, but how to get the inequality to be true? Doing some rough work I noticed that it "appears" to be true for n>=3. Would induction be the way to go about this step...
  26. N

    MHB Convolution of two discrete sequence

    Hi, New to this topic, and need some help. My task is to find the convolution between $ y= x ∗ h$ where $x = u_n - u_{n-N}$ and $h_n = u_n - u_{n-M}$ and $M\ge N$ are positive integers My understanding is that in general, $ y= x ∗ h = \sum\limits_{m=-\infty}^\infty x_m h_{n-m} $ so for my...
  27. Seydlitz

    Finding an upper-estimate for a sequence.

    Hi guys, I'm on the verge of sandwiching this particular sequence but I need rather tight upper estimate to trap the limit to 1. I can only manage to get the sequence that converges to ##e## as the current upper estimate. Is it possible to get tighter bound than that? \\ 1 +...
  28. adjacent

    Find x,y,z in Sequence: 33, ?,?,?,88

    Homework Statement The last two terms, are added together to produce the next term ##-33,x,y,z,88## ##\text{Find }x,y\text{ and }z## Homework Equations ##y=x-33## ##x+y=z## ##y+z=88## The Attempt at a Solution By substituting the expression for y in the third equation for the first equation...
  29. I

    MHB How do i determine if a sequence converges or diverges

    like these problems for example. if it converges then I am supposed to find the limit. $a_n=\frac{\sin\left({2n}\right)}{1+\sqrt{n}}$ $\left|\sin\left({2n}\right)\right| \le 1$ $a_n=\frac{(-3)^n}{n!}$ $\left|a_n\right| > 0$
  30. A

    MHB Sequence Divergence and Convergence Questions

    Hey guys, I have a couple more questions. For the first one, taking the limit to infinity obviously equals 0 so it should be convergent, right? Also, for the second one, the limit as n approaches infinity for gives me indeterminate form, so I took the derivative which just gave me ln(n)...
  31. J

    How Does the Modulus Operator Work in Coin Change Algorithms?

    only had a brief intro to algorithms like this Given an amount of money A between.01 and .99, this determines the breakdown of A into quarters (q) dimes (d) nickels (n) pennies (p) q:=A div 25 A:=A mod 25 d:= A div 10 A:= A mod 10 n:= A div 5 p:= A mod 5 I have to trace the...
  32. anemone

    MHB Sequence Challenge: Find $a_{61}+a_{63}$

    A sequence is defined recursively by $a_1=2007$, $a_2=2008$, $a_3=-2009$, and for $n>3$, $a_n=a_{n-1}-a_{n-2}+a_{n-3}+n$. Find $a_{61}+a_{63}$.
  33. H

    Induction motor and sequence reactance

    Hello! This is my second post about sequence reactances. This time- its in induction motor. To my understanding ( once again ) - In any network (symmetrical or unsymmetrical) , there would be 3 components- positive sequence component, negative sequence component and zero sequence...
  34. H

    Sequence components in fault study

    Hi all! I am currently learning fault study in power systems. To my understanding- In any network (symmetrical or unsymmetrical) , there would be 3 components- positive sequence component, negative sequence component and zero sequence component. Question: For generators and transformers ...
  35. X

    How do I find the General Term of a Sequence?

    1. Write down the general term of each of the following sequences in simplest form: So far I have been using guess and check to find the solutions, but it doesn't seem much use when you get to a sequence more complicated like this: 1, -4, 7, -10, 13, ... I really need to find an equation that I...
  36. anemone

    MHB Solve the Sequence Challenge: Find the Missing Digit & a Term

    There is a sequence which has the first 3 terms listed as $1,\,94095,\,5265679\cdots$. The 50th term has all but one digit. If the missing digit is $a$, find the $a$th term from this sequence.
  37. A

    Nested sequence of closed sets and convergence in a topological space.

    Homework Statement Let ##X## be a topological space. Let ##A_1 \supseteq A_2 \supseteq A_3...## be a sequence of closed subsets of ##X##. Suppose that ##a_i \in Ai## for all ##i## and that ##a_i \rightarrow b##. Prove that ##b \in \cap A_i##. Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution...
  38. R

    Non anthropic decimal sequence origins?

    I am having difficulty trying to find any history in mathematics of the concept that the decimal number system is not just a product of human ingenuity. This anthropic assumption (and assumption is all that is) seems to have entirely precluded the contrary hypothesis that decimal sequence...
  39. D

    How Do You Solve for b in an Arithmetic Sequence Involving 1/a, 1/b, and 1/c?

    Homework Statement * "/" means divided by * 1/a , 1/b , 1/c are consecutive terms in an AS, where a,b,c ε R\0. (whatever that means haha) express b in terms of a and c. give your answer in its simplest form. *thats all it says* Homework Equations there are none :) The...
  40. D

    Arithmetic Sequence for homework,im also new to this website

    Homework Statement a, b and c are consecutive numbers in a geometric sequence, where a+b ≠ 0 and b+c ≠ 0 * "/" means divide * Show that 2ab/a+b, b and 2bc/b+c are consecutive terms in an arithmetic sequence The Attempt at a Solution i know this has something to do with it...
  41. T

    What is a good sequence through math for physicists?

    Hello everybody, this is my first post. I was wondering, what math a physicist needs. I know about the mathematical methods books, but I was hoping to learn as much math as I can rigorously. (I find it fascinating) So what kind of course sequence would encompass a lot of the math needed...
  42. S

    MHB Proving Cauchy Convergence in Natural Nos: Metrics & Converse

    Using the fact that the Natural Nos are complete .then prove that every Cauchy sequence in Natural Nos converges in N and the converse. I do not even know if we can have a Cauchy sequence in Natural Nos. What would be the appropriate metric to use in our Cauchy sequence??
  43. lfdahl

    MHB Find the limit of a sequence II

    Let the sequence ${x_n}$ be defined by $x_0=2$ and $x_n=\frac{x_{n-1}}{2}+\frac{1}{x_{n-1}}$ for $n \ge 1$. Find the limit.
  44. E

    Detecting Phase sequence with light bulbs/ Short circuit voltage

    Homework Statement 1) If one is using light bulbs to detect phase sequence then it is wise to connect them in series with circuit resistor. Why ? 2) There is short circuit in phase "A". In which case is short circuit voltage larger, in four-drive (?) system or in three-drive (?) system ...
  45. G

    Calculating the sum of a sequence

    Homework Statement Compute \sum\frac{4}{(-3)^n}-\frac{3}{3^n} as n begins from 0 and approaches infinity Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution I'm just getting started on sequences and series, and so far learned about the limit test, comparison test, arithmetic / geometric...
  46. G

    Finite state machine (Digital) Sequence

    Hello, here is the problem that I have: Can you please tell me how to determine what is the sequence of the output. I can see it misses 101 and 010 and it repeats 000 and 100. I think both 101 and 010 are initial states. The answer I have for repeated sequence is 011, 111, 110, 100...
  47. F

    Sequence diverges or converges

    Question 1 write the first 4 terms in the sequence defined by a 1 = -2, a n+1 = an/n! this what I tried a2 = -2/1 a3 = -2/2 a4 = -1/6 Question 2 determine the following sequences converges or diverges 1- an = sqrt(n^2 -3 )/ 5th rt(n^2) what I would try is to divide both...
  48. lfdahl

    MHB What is the value of $a_{2013}$ in the sequence challenge II?

    Let $a_1 = 1$, $a_2 = a_3 = 2$, $a_4 = a_5 = a_6 = 3$, $a_7 = a_8 = a_9 = a_{10} = 4$, and so on. That is, $a_n ∶ 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 6, . . . . $ What is $a_{2013}$?
  49. lfdahl

    MHB What is the limit of the sequence {$a_n$}?

    Let the sequence {$a_n$} be defined by $a_1 = 1$ and $a_n = \frac{1}{1+a_{n-1}}$ for $n \ge 2$ . Find the limit.
  50. M

    MHB Prove $\lim_{n \to \infty} \sqrt[n]{a_1a_2...a_n} = L$ for Convergent ${a_n}$

    Assume the sequence of positive numbers ${a_n}$ converges to L. Prove that $\lim_{n \to \infty} \sqrt[n]{a_1a_2...a_n} = L$ (The nth root of the product of the first n terms) Since ${a_n}$ converges we know that for every $\epsilon> 0$ there is an $N$ such that for all $n > N$ $ |a_n -...
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