Geometric sequences

Part ofMathsPatterns and sequences

Key points

Image caption,
Each term in this sequence is doubling (multiplying by 2) to create the next term.

A is a list of numbers or diagrams that are in order.

  • Number sequences are sets of numbers that follow a pattern or a rule.

  • If the rule is to multiply or divide by a specific number each time, it is called a geometric sequence.

  • A number pattern which increases (or decreases) by the same amount each time is called an .

  • Recognising the pattern between the means that the sequence can be continued using a rule.

  • Sequences that are connected by relationships are geometric sequences, whereas those connected by relationships are linear.

Image caption,
Each term in this sequence is doubling (multiplying by 2) to create the next term.
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Finding missing terms in a geometric sequence

  • Each term in a geometric sequence is found by multiplying or dividing the previous term by the same amount, this is called the common ratio.

  • To find the common ratio, start by calculating the difference between each pair of numbers, moving from one term to the next.

Examples

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide1 of 9, Example one. A sequence with the terms one, two, four, eight, sixteen., What is the next term in the sequence?

Question

What is the next number in this geometric sequence?

A sequence with the terms eighty, forty, twenty, ten.

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Finding the common ratio

  • The common ratio is the number you multiply or divide by at each stage of the sequence. It is found by dividing two consecutive pairs of terms.

  • It does not matter which pair of terms is chosen, as long as they are next to each other in the sequence.

Examples

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide1 of 8, Example one. A sequence with the terms one hundred, two hundred, four hundred, eight hundred. , What is the common ratio of this geometric sequence of numbers?

Question

What is the common ratio of this geometric sequence?

A sequence with the terms one, ten, one hundred, one thousand.

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Practise geometric sequences

Quiz

Practise recognising and finding terms in geometric sequences with this quiz. You may need a pen and paper to help you with your answers.

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Real-life maths

An image of a microbiologist inspecting a petri dish.
Image caption,
Scientists like microbiologists use geometric sequences to monitor the growth of bacteria.

Geometric sequences are used in everyday life when something follows a pattern. An example of this is in scientific work, when the growth of bacteria is monitored.

If provided with the optimum conditions for growth, the population of bacteria grows in a geometric sequence, because bacteria reproduce by dividing into two.

Scientists, such as microbiologists, can predict how much bacteria will develop in a petri dish after a certain number of days by finding the common ratio.

An image of a microbiologist inspecting a petri dish.
Image caption,
Scientists like microbiologists use geometric sequences to monitor the growth of bacteria.
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