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Sequence Sum Situation (
Posted on 2021-10-06
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Define S(n) as the sum of the first n terms of an arithmetic sequence.
For some arithmetic sequence there exists positive integers m and n such that S(m) = n and S(n) = m.
What is S(m+n)?
No Solution Yet
Submitted by
Brian Smith
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3.0000
(1 votes)
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Solution
| Comment 1 of 4
S(m+n)= -m-n
I let the sequence have first term be a+d with constant difference d.
S(n)=na+n(n+1)d/2=m
S(m)=ma+m(m+1)d/2=n
This is just a linear system in a and d. Solving gives
a=(n^2+m^2+mn+m+n)/mn, d=-2(m+n)/mn
Writing out S(m+n) with these substitutions, the result simplifies to
S(m+n)= -m-n
This took a fair amount of algebra, so there's probably a nicer way.
Posted by
Jer
on 2021-10-06 13:04:22
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