Induction help!!! (1 Viewer)

kangarulz

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ahh i can't remember how to do the proving step in induction for n=k+1

i just can't remember how i'm suppose to sub it in then prove it so its the right answer at the end
 

airie

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You need to deduce that the statement to be proven holds true for k+1, if it is known that it holds for a number k. What is the question?
 

kangarulz

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i've worked it out now for the summation problems, i'm just strugglign with the divisibility ones now
 

Riviet

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kangarulz said:
i've worked it out now for the summation problems, i'm just strugglign with the divisibility ones now
What's your method for the divisibility ones?
 
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pLuvia

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This one is too easy to be an exam question, but this is gist of proving the divisible ones

For example for proving that 9n is divisble by 3 for postiive n, by mathematical induction

Show true for n=1
S(1)=9
Which is divisble by 3

Assume n=k
S(k)=9k=3N (where N is an integer)
Let n=k+1
S(k+1)=9k+1
=9k.9
=3N.9 [From assumption]

Therefore it is divisible by 3. Hence if n=k is true, then n=k+1 is true, then by mathematical induction the statement is divisible by 3 for all positive n
 
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