Upgrade to get full access
Kumar Rohan

Physics and Mathematics

All forms of A.P.

All Important Formulas of Arithmetic Progression (A.P.)


1. What is an Arithmetic Progression?

An Arithmetic Progression is a sequence in which the difference between consecutive terms is constant.

Example:
[2, 5, 8, 11, 14, …]

Here, the constant difference is 3.


2. Basic Terms and Notations in A.P.

Quantity Meaning
[a] First term of the A.P.
[d] Common difference
[n] Number of terms
[T_{n}] [n^{th}] term
[S_{n}] Sum of first n terms
[l] Last term

3. Common Difference Formula

The common difference is the difference between any term and the previous term.

[ d = a_2 − a_1 ]

or

[ d = T_{n} − T_{n-1} ]

Explanation:
In an A.P., this value is the same for all consecutive terms.


4. nᵗʰ Term (General Term) Formula

The formula for the nᵗʰ term of an Arithmetic Progression is:

[ T_{n} = a + (n − 1)d ]

When to use:

  • To find any specific term (10ᵗʰ term, 20ᵗʰ term, etc.)
  • To identify whether a sequence is an A.P.

5. Sum of First n Terms of an A.P.

Formula 1 (when a and d are known)

[ S_{n} = \dfrac{n}{2} [2a + (n − 1)d] ]

Use this formula when:

  • First term [a] and common difference [d] are given

Formula 2 (when a and last term l are known)

[ S_{n} = \dfrac{n}{2} (a + l) ]

Use this formula when:

  • First term [a] and last term [l] are given

6. Last Term of an A.P.

The last term of an A.P. with [n] terms is:

[ l = a + (n − 1)d ]

Note:
This is actually the same as the [n^{th}] term formula.


7. Arithmetic Mean (A.M.) Formula

Arithmetic Mean between two numbers

If two numbers are [a] and [b], then:

[ A.M. = \dfrac{a + b}{2} ]


Inserting n Arithmetic Means between a and b

Common difference:

[ d = \dfrac{b − a}{n + 1} ]

The Arithmetic Means are:

[a + d, a + 2d, a + 3d, … , a + nd]


8. nᵗʰ Term from the Sum of n Terms

If [Sₙ] is given, then the nᵗʰ term is:

[ T_{n} = S_{n} − S_{n-1} ]

Very Important:
If [S_{n}] is a quadratic expression, then the sequence is an A.P.


9. Relationship between First Term, Last Term, and Number of Terms

[ n = \dfrac{l − a}{d} + 1 ]

Used when:

  • First term, last term, and common difference are known
  • Number of terms is to be found

10. Middle Term of an A.P.

If an A.P. has an odd number of terms, then the middle term is:

[ T_{\dfrac{n+1}{2}} ]

Also,

[ \text{Middle term} = \dfrac{a + l}{2} ]


11. Important Special Results

  • If [a = 0], the A.P. starts from zero
  • If [d = 0], all terms are equal
  • If [d > 0], the A.P. is increasing
  • If [d < 0], the A.P. is decreasing

12. Summary Table (Very Useful for Exams)

Requirement Formula
Common difference [d = a_2 − a_1]
[n^{th}] term [T_{n} = a + (n − 1)d]
Sum of n terms [S_{n} = \dfrac{n}{2} [2a + (n − 1)d]]
Sum using last term [S_{n} = \dfrac{n}{2} (a + l)]
Last term [l = a + (n − 1)d]
Arithmetic Mean [\dfrac{a + b}{2}]
nᵗʰ term from sum [T_{n} = S_{n} − S_{n-1}]
Number of terms [n = \dfrac{l − a}{d} + 1]

Exam Tip for Students

Before solving any A.P. problem, always:

  1. Identify [a], [d], and [n]
  2. Decide which formula fits the given data
  3. Write the formula before substituting values

This habit alone can double accuracy in exams.

Unlock the full course today

Get full access to all videos and content.

Scroll to Top
New to Ucale?
Already have a account?
OR
Share