Intermediate

Sequences

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
A23·A24·A25

Term-to-Term and Position-to-Term Rules (A23)

A sequence is an ordered list of numbers following a rule. Two types of rule describe sequences:

Term-to-term rule — describes how to find the next term from the previous one.

Example: start at 3, add 4 each time → 3, 7, 11, 15, 19, …

Position-to-term rule (nth term formula) — gives the value of any term directly from its position .

Example: , , , …

Worked example — the sequence is defined by . Find the first four terms and the 10th term.

, , , ,

Worked example — a sequence has term-to-term rule "multiply by 3". The first term is 2. Write the first 5 terms.

Special Sequences and Patterns (A24)

Triangular numbers:

Square numbers:

Cube numbers:

Fibonacci-type sequences — each term is the sum of the two preceding terms:

Arithmetic progression (AP) — constant difference between consecutive terms.

Example: has , :

Geometric progression (GP) — constant ratio between consecutive terms.

Example: has :

(Extra context — Higher: sequences involving surds (e.g. ) follow the same geometric rule with , .)

nth Term of Linear Sequences (A25 Foundation)

For an arithmetic (linear) sequence with common difference and first term :

Method:

  1. Find the common difference (difference between consecutive terms).
  2. Multiply to get the " times table" sequence.
  3. Adjust by the constant needed to match the sequence.

Worked example — find the nth term of

. Start with : Need to add 3 each time to match.

✓ Check: ;

Worked example — find the nth term of

. Start with : Need to add 23.

✓ Check: ;

Finding a specific term — is 100 in the sequence ? — not an integer, so 100 is not in the sequence.

Quadratic Sequences (A24 / A25 Higher)

A quadratic sequence has a constant second difference (not a constant first difference).

Identifying quadratic sequences:

12345
38152435
First diff.57911
Second diff.222

Constant second difference of 2 → quadratic. The leading coefficient is , so

Method (Higher) — find the nth term:

  1. Note the second difference . Leading term: .
  2. Subtract from the sequence; find the linear nth term of the remainder.
  3. Combine.

Worked example — find the nth term of

Second difference ; leading term . Subtract: , , , → remainder is .

✓ Check: ✓;

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Geometric Progressions in Context

Geometric progressions model exponential growth or decay. For ratio : growth. For : decay.

Worked example — a bacteria population starts at 500 and doubles every hour. How many bacteria are present after 6 hours?

. After 6 hours ( if counting from hour 0): .

Alternatively: (multiply by 2 six times). ✓

Which term exceeds 10,000? . Since and , , so — the 6th term first exceeds 10,000.

(Extra context — the formula for the sum of a GP is ; not required for GCSE but useful background.)

Common Exam Mistakes

1. nth term of a linear sequence — confusing the difference with the constant

The common difference gives the coefficient of , not the full nth term formula. For the nth term is , not .

2. Geometric sequence — multiplying by a number other than the ratio

If the sequence is the ratio is 3 (multiply each term by 3). Adding 4 (the difference between the first two terms in the AP) would be wrong.

3. Quadratic sequence — using second difference as leading coefficient directly

The leading coefficient is , not the second difference itself. Second diff = 6 → leading term , not .

4. Checking whether a value is a term — forgetting must be a positive integer

gives a valid term only if is a positive integer. If you get a fractional or negative , the value is not in the sequence.

MistakeCorrection
"nth term of : " — check:
"Is 50 in sequence ? Yes, because " is a positive integer, so yes ✓ — but must check!
"Second difference is 4, so leading term is "Leading term is

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