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CAT 2025 Lesson : Progressions - AP Concepts

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1. Introduction

Sequence is a set of numbers that follow a logical rule or pattern. This logical rule/pattern need not necessarily translate into a formula.

Progression is a set of numbers that follow a logical rule, which has a formula to calculate the
nth n^{\text{th}} term. This lesson will cover the different forms of progressions that we are tested on with special focus on the 33 basic forms of progressions – Arithmetic Progression (AP), Geometric Progression (GP), and Harmonic Progression (HP).

Terms Pattern nth term Sequence? Progression?
55, 88, 1111, 1414, 1717 , ... Difference between consecutive terms is 33. 5+3×(n1)5 + 3 \times (n - 1) Yes Yes
27,9,3,1,27, 9, 3, 1, 13 \dfrac{1}{3} , 19 \dfrac{1}{9} , ... Every consecutive term is a multiple of (13\dfrac{1}{3}) . 27×27 \times ( 13)(n1)\dfrac{1}{3} )^{(n - 1)} Yes Yes
2,3,5,7,11,13,17 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, ... List of all prime numbers. No direct formula Yes No
1,1,2,3,5,8,13,..1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, ... Sum of previous 22 numbers. No direct formula Yes No


2. Arithmetic Progression

If the difference between every two consecutive terms of a sequence is constant, then the sequence is said to be in Arithmetic Progression (AP).

If
x1,x2,x3,x4,...,xn x_1, x_2, x_3, x_4, ..., x_n are in Arithmetic Progression, then x2x1=x3x2=...=xnxn1 x_2 - x_1 = x_3 - x_2 = ... = x_n - x_{n - 1}

Where
aa is the first term and dd is the common difference, the terms of the AP will be

aa, a+da + d, a+2da + 2d, a+3da + 3d, ... , aa + (nn - 1)dd

x1=ax_1 = a
x2=a+dx_2 = a + d
x3=a+2dx_3 = a + 2d
x4=a+3dx_4 = a + 3d
xnx_n == aa + (nn – 1)dd

For the following examples of AP, not the first term
(a) (a) and common difference (d) (d) .

Arithmetic Progression a & d nth^{\text{th}} term
33, 77, 1111, ... a=3a = 3, d=4d = 4 3+(n1)×43+(n-1) \times 4
89-89, 72-72, 55-55, ... aa =89= -89, d=17d = 17 89+(n1)×17-89+(n-1) \times 17
100100, 9696, 9292, ... a=100a = 100, dd =4= -4 100+(n1)×(4)100+(n-1) \times (-4)


2.1 Terms & Formulae for AP

Where
aa and dd are the first term and common difference respectively in an AP with nn terms,

1)
nth n^{\text{th}} == aa + (nn – 1)dd

2) Average of an AP
== Average of First and Last terms == x1+xn2\dfrac {x_1+x_n}{2}

3) Sum of terms of an AP
== Sn \bold{S_n} == n×Average=n×(x1+xn2)=n2×[2a+(n1)d]n \times \text{Average} = n \times \left( \dfrac{x_1 + x_n}{2} \right) = \dfrac {n}{2} \times [ 2a + (n-1)d ]

4) Number of terms in an AP
== n n == Last Term - First TermCommon Difference+1=xnx1d+1\dfrac {\text{Last Term - First Term}}{\text{Common Difference}}+1 = \dfrac {x_n- x_1}{d}+1

2.2 Properties of AP

1) If each term of an AP is added, subtracted, multiplied or divided by a constant, then the resulting sequence is also in AP.

2) In two APs with the same number of terms, if the corresponding terms by position in the two APs are added/subtracted, the resulting sequence will also be in AP.

3) Average of an AP is its median.

4) If
a a , bb and cc are in AP, then b=a+c2 b = \dfrac{a+c}{2}

5) Sum of the first and last terms equals the second and second last terms, which then equals the third and third from last terms and so on (as shown below).

x1+xnx_1 + x_n == aa + aa + (nn – 1)dd == 2a2a + (nn – 1)dd
x2+xn1x_2 + x_{n-1} == aa + dd + aa + (nn – 2)dd == 2a2a + (nn – 1)dd
x3+xn2x_3 + x_{n-2} == aa + 2d2d + aa + (nn – 3)dd == 2a2a + (nn – 1)dd

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