Find the number of all sequences <mo fence="false" stretchy="false">{ a <mrow clas

Roland Manning

Roland Manning

Answered question

2022-06-20

Find the number of all sequences { a n } in { 5 , 4 , 3 , . . . , 0 , 1 , . . . , 100 } such that | a n | < | a n + 1 |

Answer & Explanation

Aiden Norman

Aiden Norman

Beginner2022-06-21Added 16 answers

Step 1
Let { a n } be a sequence [possibly empty]. By the reasoning of the OP, the sequence { a n } is completely determined by 1. and 2 together below:
1) for each of the 5 integers i { 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 } , whether i, -i, or neither, is in { a n } [so 3 choices, and those are precisely the 3 choices for each of those 5 integers i],
2) for each of the remaining 96 integers i { 0 , 6 , 7 , 8 , , 100 }
whether or not i is in { a n } [so 2 choices for each of those 96 integers i].
So this yields precisely 3 5 × 2 96 choices for { a n } , including the empty sequence. There is however, exactly 1 empty sequence, the number of **nonempty { a n } is then ( 3 5 × 2 96 ) 1 .
What if the condition were changed to | a n | | a n + 1 | , instead of | a n | < | a n + 1 | . Then the number of such sequences becomes 4 5 2 96 1 . Can you see why.
April Bush

April Bush

Beginner2022-06-22Added 6 answers

Step 1
Final answer should be
[ 3 5 × 2 ( 96 ) ] 1.
This is very similar to your initial estimate, except that for 5 of the absolute values, { | 1 | , | 2 | , , | 5 | } , you have three choices, rather than two choices.

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