Geometric sequence: Difference between revisions
imported>Peter Schmitt (→Examples: 4 more examples) |
imported>Peter Schmitt m (→Examples: stress link) |
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* <math> {1\over2}, 1, 2, 4, \dots , 2^{n-2}, \dots </math> (infinite, quotient 2) | * <math> {1\over2}, 1, 2, 4, \dots , 2^{n-2}, \dots </math> (infinite, quotient 2) | ||
* <math> 1, 0, 0, 0, \dots \ </math> (infinite, quotient 0) (See [[#General form| | * <math> 1, 0, 0, 0, \dots \ </math> (infinite, quotient 0) (See [[#General form|General form]] below) | ||
== Application in finance == | == Application in finance == |
Revision as of 10:35, 11 May 2010
A geometric sequence (or geometric progression) is a (finite or infinite) sequence of (real or complex) numbers such that the quotient (or ratio) of consecutive elements is the same for every pair.
In finance, compound interest generates a geometric sequence.
Examples
Examples for geometric sequences are
- (finite, length 6: 6 elements, quotient 2)
- (finite, length 4: 4 elements, quotient −2)
- (infinite, quotient )
- (infinite, quotient 1)
- (infinite, quotient −1)
- (infinite, quotient 2)
- (infinite, quotient 0) (See General form below)
Application in finance
The computation of compound interest leads to a geometric series:
When an initial amount A is deposited at an interest rate of p percent per time period then the value An of the deposit after n time-periods is given by
i.e., the values A=A0, A1, A2, A3, ... form a geometric sequence with quotient q = 1+(p/100).
Mathematical notation
A finite sequence
or an infinite sequence
is called geometric sequence if
for all indices i. (The indices need not start at 0 or 1.)
General form
Thus, the elements of a geometric sequence can be written as
Sum
The sum (of the elements) of a finite geometric sequence is
The sum of an infinite geometric sequence is a geometric series: