1014 B
1014 B
A sequence is defined as an ordered list of numbers.
- Sequences are ordered, meaning two sequences that contain the same values but in a different order are not equal.
- Sequences can be infinite if a rule is defined, i.e
\{1, 1, 1, 1, ...\}; a_i = 1
Behavior
-
A sequence is considered increasing if
a_n
is smaller thana_{n+1}
for alln
. -
A sequence is considered decreasing if
a_n
is greater than or equal toa_{n+1}
for alln
. -
Sequences exist that do not fall into either category, i.e,
a_n = (-1)^n
-
If the terms of a sequence grow
\{a_n\}
get arbitrarily close to a single numberL
asn
grows larger, this is noted by writing:\lim_{n\to\infty} a_n = L
OR
a_n \to L \text{ as } n \to \infty
and say that a_n
converges to L
. If no L
exists, we say \{a_n\}
diverges.
Properties of Sequences
The below properties assume two sequences are defined,
a_n \to L
andb_n \to M
a_n + b_n \to L + M
C*a_n \to CL
a_n b_n \to LM