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Higher Maths Revision Notes Recurrence Relations Get Started goodbye

Higher Maths

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Higher Maths. Revision Notes. Get Started. Recurrence Relations. goodbye. Recurrence Relations. know the meaning of the terms: sequence, n th term, limit as n tends to infinity. use the notation u n for the n th term of a sequence. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Higher Maths

Higher Maths

Revision NotesRecurrence Relations Get Started

goodbye

Page 2: Higher Maths

Recurrence Relations

know the meaning of the terms: sequence, nth term, limit as n tends to infinity

use the notation un for the nth term of a

sequence

define a recurrence relation of the form un + 1 = mun + c (m, c constants) in a

mathematical model

know the condition for the limit of the sequence resulting from a recurrence

relation to exist

find (where possible) and interpret the limit of the sequence resulting from a recurrence relation in a mathematical model

interpret a recurrence relation of the form un + 1

= mun + c (m, c constants) in a

mathematical model

Page 3: Higher Maths

A sequence is a list of terms.

The terms can be identified using: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc

The general term is often referred to as the nth term.

We are most interested in sequences where the nth term is a function of n.

We already know how to find the formula for the nth term where the terms increase

by a constant amount.

e.g. 4, 11,18, 25, …

If we assume the terms continue to increase by 7 then we think, … the nth term is 7n … expect a 1st term of 7.

However, the 1st term is 4

Since 4 = 7 – 3 then the actual nth term formula is:

un = 7n – 3

We can list the sequence if we have a formula for un.

e.g.

un = n2 + 2n – 1

So u1 = 12 + 2.1 – 1 = 2

u2 = 22 + 2.2 – 1 = 7

u3 = 32 + 2.3 – 1 = 14

u4 = 42 + 2.4 – 1 = 23

We often use special terms for the terms of a sequence e.g.

un is often used for the nth term.

This means the 1st term is represented by u1,

The 2nd by u2 etc.

Test Yourself?

Page 4: Higher Maths

When un+1 is expressed as a function of un then we have a recurrence relation.e.g. un+1 = 3un + 4

This relation will only pin down a particular sequence if we also know one term in the sequence, often u1, but not always.

e.g. Using the above, if u1 = 2 then u2 = 3.2 + 4 = 10; u3 = 3.10 + 4 = 34 … giving the sequence 2, 10, 34, 106, …

Whereas , if u1 = 0 then u2 = 3.0 + 4 = 4; u3 = 3.4 + 4 = 16 … giving the sequence 0, 4, 16, 52, …

Sometimes u0 is used which is not strictly in the sequence.

Test Yourself?

Page 5: Higher Maths

define a recurrence relation of the form un + 1 = mun + c

(m, c constants) in a mathematical model

(i) Given the form and some terms

(ii) Given a story to model

choose

Page 6: Higher Maths

(i) Given the form and some terms

Test Yourself?

Example

A recurrence relation is of the form un+1 = aun + b.

The 3rd, 4th, and 5th terms are 9, 13 and 21 respectively.

• Find the recurrence relation

• List the first two terms.

A recurrence relation is of the form un+1 = aun + b.

If you’re given enough information, you can form a system of two equations and solve it for a and b

Using u3 = 9 and u4 = 13 and un+1 = aun + b.

13 = 9a + b …

Using u4 = 13 and u5 = 21

21 = 13a + b …

Subtracting we from get 4a = 8 a = 2

Substituting in gives 13 = 9.2 + b b = 13 – 18 = –5

Page 7: Higher Maths

(ii) Given a story to model

Test Yourself?

ExampleAn area initially has 5000 sites vandalised by graffiti artists.A campaign hopes to clean 90% of the sites during the working week.At the weekend the vandals deface another 100 sites.

Model the situation by a recurrence relation using un to represent the number of vandalised sites on the nth Monday since the start of the campaign.

Response

un+1 = 0·1un + 100

If a real-life situation is being modelled by a recurrence relationship take care.The model only gives a snap-shot of the actual function.

Many situations describe a two-stage process … the model only gives the values after both steps have been taken.

Don’t read anthing into apparent values at the end of the first steps.

Page 8: Higher Maths

The condition for the limit of the sequence to exist.

Test Yourself?

The recurrence relation un+1 = 0·5un + 4 with u1 = 264 produces the sequence 264, 136, 72, 40, 24, 16, 12, 10, 9, 8·5, 8·25, 8·125, … As n tends to infinity we see that un tends towards 8.In fact, using any starting number, this relation produces a sequence which will converge on 8.

On the other hand, the recurrence relation un+1 = 2un – 8 with u1 = 9 produces 9, 10, 12, 16, 24, 40, 72, 136, …It diverges using any starting number … with the exception of u1 = 8, where it ‘sticks’ at 8.

In both types, 8 is called a fixed point. • In the first type the sequence runs towards 8 … 8 is a limit.• In the second type the sequence runs away from 8 … 8 is not a limit.

How do you tell the types apart?In the relation, un+1 = aun + b, the sequence converges if –1 < a < 1 [i.e. if a is a proper fraction]

What happens over time?

Page 9: Higher Maths

Find and interpret the limit

Test Yourself?

Always state the grounds for a limit to exist.If you don’t, you may just be finding a fixed point … and every linear recurrence relation has a fixed point.

un+1 = aun + b has a limit since –1 < a < 1

How do we find the limit?If there exists a limit, L, then, as n tends to infinity, un+1 tends to un.

Solve the equation L = aL + b for L.

How do we interpret the limit?In any context, the recurrence relation which models it provides snapshots only of the situation. • Don’t make anything of ‘intermediate’ values (values deduced from the story mid-cycle), the model doesn’t promise any sense here.• Don’t try fractional values of n. n is a whole number. • In context un itself may be a whole number to be sensible.

This will affect the interpretation of the limit.

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