Q:

Please Help Quickly!! The ancient Greeks were very interested in number patterns.

Accepted Solution

A:
Answer:C) a(n) = ⁿ⁽ⁿ ⁺ ¹⁾/₂Step-by-step explanation:We can plug in, for example, 1 for n. And if n = 1, since it is the first number of the sequence, the new number should also be 1.A) 2 * n --> 2 * 1 --> 2; 2 ≠ 1, so A is incorrect.B) n²/2 --> 1²/2 --> 1/2; 1/2 ≠ 1, so B is also incorrect.C) 1(1 + 1)/2 --> 2/2 --> 1; 1 = 1, so C could be correct.D) (1  + 1)/2 --> 2/2 --> 1; 1 = 1, so D could be correct.Since either C or D could be correct, we can plug in n = 2 to see if it will be 3.C) 2(2 + 1)/2 --> 6/2 --> 3; 3 = 3, so C could be correct.D) (2 + 1)/2 --> 3/2 --> 3/2 ≠ 3, so D is not correct.From this, we can conclude that C is the correct answer.