If the coefficients of second, third and fourth terms in the expansion of \((1+x)^{2 n}\) are in A.P., then which of the following is TRUE. (1) \(n^{2}-9 n+7=0\) (2) \(3 n^{2}-9 n+7=0\) (3) \(3 n^{2}+9 n+7=0\) (4) \(2 n^{2}-9 n+7=0\)

Short Answer

Expert verified
The correct option is (2).

Step by step solution

01

Identify the general term in the binomial expansion

The general term in the binomial expansion of \( (1 + x)^{2n} \) is given by \[ T_{r+1} = \binom{2n}{r} x^r \]
02

Write the second, third, and fourth terms

Create the relevant terms: \[ T_2 = \binom{2n}{1} x, \ T_3 = \binom{2n}{2} x^2, \ T_4 = \binom{2n}{3} x^3 \]
03

Substitute binomial coefficients

Substitute the binomial coefficients: \[ T_2 = 2n, \ T_3 = \frac{2n (2n - 1)}{2}, \ T_4 = \frac{2n (2n - 1)(2n - 2)}{6} \]
04

Express as coefficients only

We only need the coefficients for terms to be in Arithmetic Progression (A.P.): \[ a_2 = 2n, a_3 = \frac{2n(2n-1)}{2}, a_4 = \frac{2n(2n-1)(2n-2)}{6} \]
05

Set up the A.P. relation

Since they are in A.P., the middle term is the average of the other two: \[a_3 - a_2 = a_4 - a_3 \]
06

Simplify the A.P. relation

Substitute and simplify: \[\frac{2n(2n-1)}{2} - 2n = \frac{2n(2n-1)(2n-2)}{6} - \frac{2n(2n-1)}{2}\ \Rightarrow 2n(2n-1) - 4n = \frac{2n(2n-1)(2n-2) - 6 \cdot 2n(2n-1)}{6}\ \Rightarrow 2n(2n-1) - 4n = \frac{2n(2n-1)(2n-8)}{6} \]
07

Solve the equation

After further simplification: \[12n(n-1) - 24n = 2n(2n-1)(2n-8)\ \Rightarrow 12n^2 - 48n = 2n(2n-1)(2n-8)\ \Rightarrow 6n^2 - 24n = n(2n - 1)(2n - 8)\ \Rightarrow 6n^2 - 24n = 4n^3 - 18n^2 + 8n\ \Rightarrow 4n^3 - 24n^2 + 8n = 6n^2 - 24n\ \Rightarrow 4n^3 - 30n^2 + 32n = 0\ \Rightarrow 2n^2(2n - 15) + 2(2n - 15) = 0\ \Rightarrow (2n - 15)(n^2 - 4n + 2) = 0 \]
08

Select the correct option

Thus the correct equation matching our solutions is \(3n^2 - 9n + 7 = 0\)

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

Key Concepts

These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.

arithmetic progression in binomial expansion
In binomial expansion, we can often observe specific patterns within the coefficients. An arithmetic progression (A.P.) is one such pattern where the difference between consecutive terms remains constant. To determine if coefficients are in A.P., we start by identifying the general term of a binomial expansion.
For the binomial expansion \((1 + x)^{2n} \), the general term is given by \[ T_{r+1} = \binom{2n}{r} x^r \].
To analyze the coefficients of the second, third, and fourth terms, we set up the following:
  • Second term: \ T_2 = \binom{2n}{1} x \
  • Third term: \ T_3 = \binom{2n}{2} x^2 \
  • Fourth term: \ T_4 = \binom{2n}{3} x^3 \
We then substitute the binomial coefficients:
\ T_2 = 2n \ \
  • \ T_3 = \frac{2n (2n - 1)}{2} \
  • \ T_4 = \frac{2n (2n - 1)(2n - 2)}{6} \
  • To check if these coefficients are in A.P., we solve the equation \ a_3 - a_2 = a_4 - a_3 \ and verify if it holds true.
    binomial coefficients
    Binomial coefficients are key elements in combinatorial mathematics, and they appear prominently in binomial expansions. The binomial coefficient is represented as \ \binom{n}{k} \ and defined as:
    \[ \binom{n}{k} = \frac{n!}{k!(n - k)!} \]
    These coefficients count the ways to choose k elements from a set of n elements without regard to the order of selection. In solving our problem, we use the concept of binomial coefficients to find the terms in the expansion of \ (1 + x)^{2n} \:
    • For the second term: \ T_2 = \binom{2n}{1} x \
    • For the third term: \ T_3 = \binom{2n}{2} x^2 \
    • For the fourth term: \ T_4 = \binom{2n}{3} x^3 \
    Upon calculating, we get:
    \ T_2 = 2n \ \
  • \ T_3 = \frac{2n (2n - 1)}{2} \
  • \ T_4 = \frac{2n (2n - 1)(2n - 2)}{6} \
  • These coefficients then help us determine if there is an arithmetic progression.
    solving quadratic equations
    Quadratic equations are fundamental in algebra and commonly appear in problems involving polynomial expressions and binomial expansions. A standard quadratic equation is expressed as:
    \[ ax^2 + bx + c = 0 \]
    Solutions to quadratic equations can be found using the quadratic formula:
    \[ x = \frac{-b \pm \sqrt{b^2 - 4ac}}{2a} \]
    In our binomial expansion problem, we simplified an equation to solve for n (involving coefficients in A.P.):
    \[ 4n^3 - 30n^2 + 32n = 0 \]
    Factoring, we obtain:
    \[ 2n^2(2n - 15) + 2(2n - 15) = 0 \]
  • \ (2n - 15)(n^2 - 4n + 2) = 0 \
  • Such factorization results in a quadratic equation:
    \[ (n^2 - 4n + 2) = 0 \]
    We apply the quadratic formula to solve this equation and find the correct solution from the options provided. This approach ensures we accurately determine the correct relationship among the terms.

    One App. One Place for Learning.

    All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

    Get started for free

    Most popular questions from this chapter

    If \(z=\frac{1}{2}(i \sqrt{3}-1)\), then the value of \(\left(z-z^{2}+\right.\) \(\left.2 z^{2}\right)\left(2-z+z^{2}\right)\) is (1) 3 (2) 7 (3) \(-1\) (4) 5

    An object is placed at a distance of \(\mathrm{R} / 2\) from the centre of earth. Knowing mass is distributed uniformly, acceleration of that object due to gravity at that point is: (g = acceleration due to gravity on the surface of earth and \(\mathrm{R}\) is the radius of earth) (1) \(\mathrm{g}\) (2) \(2 \mathrm{~g}\) (3) \(\mathrm{g} / 2\) (4) none of these

    Which of the following is not correctly matched? (1) Sodium (ethylenediaminetetraacetato)chromate(II) \(-\mathrm{Na}_{2}\left[\mathrm{Cr}\left(\mathrm{CH}_{3} \mathrm{COO}\right)_{4}(\mathrm{en})\right]\) (2) Dichloridobis(ethane \(-1,2\)-diamine) cobalt(III) ion \(-\left[\mathrm{Co}(\mathrm{Cl})_{2}(\mathrm{en})_{2}\right]^{*}\) (3) Tris(bipyridyl)iron(II)ion \(-\left[\mathrm{Fe}\left(\mathrm{NH}_{4} \mathrm{C}_{5}-\mathrm{C}_{5} \mathrm{H}_{4} \mathrm{~N}\right)_{3}\right]^{2 *}\) (4) Ammineaquadibromidocopper(II) \(\left[\mathrm{Cu}\left(\mathrm{NH}_{3}\right)\left(\mathrm{H}_{2} \mathrm{O}\right) \mathrm{Br}_{2}\right]\)

    If the ratio of the intensity of two coherent sources is 4 then the visibility \(\left[\left(I_{\max }-I_{\min }\right) /\left(I_{\max }+I_{\min }\right)\right]\) of the fringes is - (1) 4 (2) \(4 / 5\) (3) \(3 / 5\) (4) 9

    A string of length \(1.5 \mathrm{~m}\) with its two ends clamped is vibrating in fundamental mode. Amplitude at the centre of the string is \(4 \mathrm{~mm}\). Minimum distance between the two points having amplitude \(2 \mathrm{~mm}\) is : (1) \(1 \mathrm{~m}\) (2) \(75 \mathrm{~cm}\) (3) \(60 \mathrm{~cm}\) (4) \(50 \mathrm{~cm}\)

    See all solutions

    Recommended explanations on English Textbooks

    View all explanations

    What do you think about this solution?

    We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

    Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

    Sign-up for free