Respuesta :
Tom started out paying $200, namely the first term in that "geometric sequence" is $200.
and the next payment will be 1.2 times more than the previous, so, if the previous one was 200, the next one will be 200*1.2, and the next after that (200*1.2) * 1.2 and so on.
in a geometric sequence, to get the next term, we simply use a "multiplier", namely the "common ratio", in this case that'd be 1.2.
sigma notation wise,
[tex]\bf \qquad \qquad \textit{sum of a finite geometric sequence} \\\\ S_n=\sum\limits_{i=1}^{n}\ a_1\cdot r^{i-1}\implies S_n=a_1\left( \cfrac{1-r^n}{1-r} \right)\quad \begin{cases} n=n^{th}\ term\\ a_1=\textit{first term's value}\\ r=\textit{common ratio}\\ ----------\\ n=30\\ a_1=200\\ r=1.2 \end{cases} \\\\\\ \sum\limits_{i=1}^{30}~200(1.2)^{i-1}[/tex]
and its sum will just be
[tex]\bf \qquad \qquad \textit{sum of a finite geometric sequence} \\\\ S_n=\sum\limits_{i=1}^{n}\ a_1\cdot r^{i-1}\implies S_n=a_1\left( \cfrac{1-r^n}{1-r} \right)\quad \begin{cases} n=n^{th}\ term\\ a_1=\textit{first term's value}\\ r=\textit{common ratio}\\ ----------\\ n=30\\ a_1=200\\ r=1.2 \end{cases}[/tex]
[tex]\bf S_{30}=200\left( \cfrac{1-1.2^{30}}{1-1.2} \right)\implies S_{30}=200\left( \cfrac{1-\stackrel{\approx}{237.37631}}{-0.2} \right) \\\\\\ S_{30}=200\left(\cfrac{\stackrel{\approx}{-236.37631}}{-0.2} \right)\implies S_{30}=200(1186.88) \\\\\\ S_{30}\approx 237366.3137998[/tex]
in plain and short, when the "common ratio" is a fraction, namely less than 1 and less than 0, the serie is convergent, namely it approaches a certain fixed amount.
in this case the common ratio is 1.2, and so is not 0 < | r | < 1, so the serie is divergent, namely it keeps on going.
and the next payment will be 1.2 times more than the previous, so, if the previous one was 200, the next one will be 200*1.2, and the next after that (200*1.2) * 1.2 and so on.
in a geometric sequence, to get the next term, we simply use a "multiplier", namely the "common ratio", in this case that'd be 1.2.
sigma notation wise,
[tex]\bf \qquad \qquad \textit{sum of a finite geometric sequence} \\\\ S_n=\sum\limits_{i=1}^{n}\ a_1\cdot r^{i-1}\implies S_n=a_1\left( \cfrac{1-r^n}{1-r} \right)\quad \begin{cases} n=n^{th}\ term\\ a_1=\textit{first term's value}\\ r=\textit{common ratio}\\ ----------\\ n=30\\ a_1=200\\ r=1.2 \end{cases} \\\\\\ \sum\limits_{i=1}^{30}~200(1.2)^{i-1}[/tex]
and its sum will just be
[tex]\bf \qquad \qquad \textit{sum of a finite geometric sequence} \\\\ S_n=\sum\limits_{i=1}^{n}\ a_1\cdot r^{i-1}\implies S_n=a_1\left( \cfrac{1-r^n}{1-r} \right)\quad \begin{cases} n=n^{th}\ term\\ a_1=\textit{first term's value}\\ r=\textit{common ratio}\\ ----------\\ n=30\\ a_1=200\\ r=1.2 \end{cases}[/tex]
[tex]\bf S_{30}=200\left( \cfrac{1-1.2^{30}}{1-1.2} \right)\implies S_{30}=200\left( \cfrac{1-\stackrel{\approx}{237.37631}}{-0.2} \right) \\\\\\ S_{30}=200\left(\cfrac{\stackrel{\approx}{-236.37631}}{-0.2} \right)\implies S_{30}=200(1186.88) \\\\\\ S_{30}\approx 237366.3137998[/tex]
in plain and short, when the "common ratio" is a fraction, namely less than 1 and less than 0, the serie is convergent, namely it approaches a certain fixed amount.
in this case the common ratio is 1.2, and so is not 0 < | r | < 1, so the serie is divergent, namely it keeps on going.
