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Byju's Answer
Standard X
Mathematics
nth Term of an AP
If the pth te...
Question
If the pth term of an AP is q and its qth term is p then show that its (p + q)th term is zero.
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Solution
In the given AP, let the first term be a and the common difference be d.
Then T
n
= a + (n - 1)d
⇒ T
p
= a + (p - 1)d =
q
...(i)
⇒ T
q
= a + (q - 1)d =
p
...(ii)
On subtracting (i) from (ii), we get:
(q - p)d = (p - q)
⇒ d = -1
Putting d = -1 in (i), we get:
a = (p + q - 1)
Thus, a = (p + q - 1) and d = -1
Now, T
p
+
q
= a + (p + q - 1)d
= (p + q - 1) + (p + q - 1)(-1)
= (p + q - 1) - (p + q - 1)
=
0
Hence, the (p+q)
th
term is 0 (zero).
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