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Question
The sum of n terms of three arithmetical progression are S1 , S2 and S3 . The first term of each is unity and the common differences are 1, 2 and 3 respectively. Prove that S1 + S3 = 2S2
Sum
Solution
We have,
S1 = Sum of n terms of an A.P. with first term 1 and common difference 1
`= \frac { n }{ 2 } [2 × 1 + (n – 1) 1] = \frac { n }{ 2 } [n + 1]`
S2 = Sum of n terms of an A.P. with first term 1 and common difference 2
`= \frac { n }{ 2 } [2 × 1 + (n – 1) × 2] = n^2`
S3 = Sum of n terms of an A.P. with first term 1 and common difference 3
`= \frac { n }{ 2 } [2 × 1 + (n – 1) × 3] = \frac { n }{ 2 } (3n – 1)`
Now,
`S_1 + S_3 = \frac { n }{ 2 } (n + 1) + \frac { n }{ 2 } (3n – 1)`
= 2n2 and S2 = n2
Hence S1 + S3 = 2S2
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