Active forum topics
- Hydraulics: Rotating Vessel
- Inverse Trigo
- General Solution of $y' = x \, \ln x$
- engineering economics: construct the cash flow diagram
- Eliminate the Arbitrary Constants
- Law of cosines
- Maxima and minima (trapezoidal gutter)
- Special products and factoring
- Integration of 4x^2/csc^3x√sinxcosx dx
- application of minima and maxima
New forum topics
- Hydraulics: Rotating Vessel
- Inverse Trigo
- General Solution of $y' = x \, \ln x$
- engineering economics: construct the cash flow diagram
- Integration of 4x^2/csc^3x√sinxcosx dx
- Maxima and minima (trapezoidal gutter)
- Special products and factoring
- Newton's Law of Cooling
- Law of cosines
- Can you help me po to solve this?
Recent comments
- Determine the least depth…1 week 1 day ago
- Solve mo ang h manually…2 weeks 5 days ago
- Paano kinuha yung height na…2 weeks 5 days ago
- It's the unit conversion…4 weeks 2 days ago
- Refer to the figure below…3 weeks 4 days ago
- Yes.4 months 2 weeks ago
- Sir what if we want to find…4 months 2 weeks ago
- Hello po! Question lang po…5 months ago
- 400000=120[14π(D2−10000)]
(…6 months 1 week ago - Use integration by parts for…7 months 1 week ago
No it is not.
No it is not.
Arranged the numbers in
Arrange the numbers in increasing value: 1/6, 1/3, 1, 2. For a sequence to be arithmetic, the difference of two consecutive terms (any term - preceding term) must be equal. Let us check:
(a) 1/3 - 1/6 = 1/6
(b) 1 - 1/3 = 2/3
(c) 2 - 1 = 1
Since the difference of two adjacent terms are not equal, the given terms do not form into arithmetic sequence.
Arithmetic sequence must be
Arithmetic sequence must be in increasing and deceasing value.
No. The sequence must be 1/3,
No. The sequence must be 1/3, 1/6, 1, 2.
a, a+d, a+2d, a+3d. Where a = 1/3, and d = 1/3.