An arithmetic progression is like counting stairs, each step goes up by the same number.
Imagine you're climbing a staircase where every step is 2 inches taller than the one before. That's an arithmetic progression: a sequence of numbers that increase (or decrease) by the same amount each time. You start at a certain point, and then you add or subtract the same number again and again.
Like Baking Cookies
Let’s say you're baking cookies, and every minute you take out 3 more cookies from the oven. If you started with 2 cookies, after one minute you have 5, then 8, then 11… That’s an arithmetic progression too! The number of cookies increases by 3 each time, that's your common difference.
A Simple Example
Let’s try this: start at 4, and add 2 every time. Your sequence would be:
- 4
- 6
- 8
- 10
- 12
That’s an arithmetic progression with a starting number of 4 and a common difference of 2.
You see them everywhere, in stairs, in time, in cookies. Just remember: it's all about adding or subtracting the same amount each step! An arithmetic progression is like counting stairs, each step goes up by the same number.
Imagine you're climbing a staircase where every step is 2 inches taller than the one before. That's an arithmetic progression: a sequence of numbers that increase (or decrease) by the same amount each time. You start at a certain point, and then you add or subtract the same number again and again.
Examples
- A child counts stairs, stepping up by 1 each time: 2, 3, 4, 5...
- A baker adds 2 cookies to a tray every minute: 2, 4, 6, 8...
- A student receives 3 extra points for each correct answer: 3, 6, 9, 12...
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See also
- Why Are Some Numbers Magic?
- What are spirals?
- Why Do Numbers Appear Everywhere in Nature?
- Why Do Numbers Feel So Powerful?
- Why Do Numbers Feel So Mysterious?