Start from
and cross multiply the denominators (i.e. multiply both sides by
The result is
Expand the left hand side:
Bring all terms involving p to the left, and all terms involving q to the right:
Divide both sides by 21q:
Now we have a ratio between multiples of p and q. It's not exactly the one we want, though. Nevertheless, we can keep multiplying both sides by approriate constants in order to get the ratio we want:
Divide both sides by 5:
Multiply both sides by 3:
11/12,8/12,5/12,2/12
25, 19, 13, 7, ...
4, 12, 36, 108, ...
–5, 5, –5, 5, ...
–3, 0, 3, 6, ...
–8, –2,1/2.1/8...
Answer:
2/5,2/10,2/20,2/40...
4, 12, 36, 108, ...
–5, 5, –5, 5, ...
Step-by-step explanation:
These 3 sets represent a geometric sequence.
A geometric sequence is a series of numbers where each number is obtained by MULTIPLYING the same fixed number to the previous number.
So, in the first sequence: 2/5,2/10,2/20,2/40...
The multiplying factor is 1/2.
In the second sequence: 4, 12, 36, 108, ...
The multiplying factor is 3
In the 3rd sequence: –5, 5, –5, 5, ...
The multiplying factor is -1.
Most of the other sequences are not geometric sequences, but arithmetic sequences (where the next term is obtained by ADDITION).
the one above me is correct
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Find a common denominator or greatest common factor. 63 and 27 are both multiples of 9. When you divide each by 9 you get 7:3. 14 and 6 are both multiples of 2. When you divide each by 2 you get 7:3 again. So these ratios are equivalent.
Start with any set of numbers. Multiply them each by the same factor and the new set will be an equivalent ratio.