Question
Question: If \({{p}^{th}}\) term and \({{q}^{th}}\) term of an A.P. are \[\dfrac{1}{qr}\] and \[\dfrac{1}{pr}\...
If pth term and qth term of an A.P. are qr1 and pr1 respectively, then rth term of the A.P. is
A. pqr1
B. 1
C. pq1
D. pq
Solution
We assume the general terms of an arithmetic series. We find the formula for tn, the nth term of the series. From that we express the pth, qth, rth term and use the given relations to find the variables. We solve it and use that to find the rth term of the A.P..
Complete step by step answer:
We express the arithmetic sequence in its general form. We express the terms as tn, the nth term of the series. The first term be t1 and the common difference be d where d=t2−t1=t3−t2=t4−t3. We can express the general term tn based on the first term and the common difference. The formula being tn=t1+(n−1)d. Therefore, the pth, qth, rth terms will be tp=t1+(p−1)d, tq=t1+(q−1)d, tr=t1+(r−1)d respectively.
It is given that pth term and qth term of the A.P. are qr1 and pr1 respectively. Therefore, tp=t1+(p−1)d=qr1 and tq=t1+(q−1)d=pr1. We subtract those equations,
\Rightarrow {{t}_{q}}-{{t}_{p}} =\dfrac{1}{pr}-\dfrac{1}{qr} \\\ \Rightarrow \left( q-p \right)d=\dfrac{1}{r}\left( \dfrac{1}{p}-\dfrac{1}{q} \right)=\dfrac{q-p}{pqr} \\\ \Rightarrow d=\dfrac{1}{pqr} \\\ $$ Putting the value of $$d=\dfrac{1}{pqr}$$ in ${{t}_{p}}={{t}_{1}}+\left( p-1 \right)d=\dfrac{1}{qr}$, we get ${{t}_{p}}={{t}_{1}}+\dfrac{\left( p-1 \right)}{pqr}=\dfrac{1}{qr} \\\ \Rightarrow {{t}_{1}}=\dfrac{1}{qr}-\dfrac{\left( p-1 \right)}{pqr}=\dfrac{1}{pqr} \\\ $ Now we put ${{t}_{1}}=d=\dfrac{1}{pqr}$ in ${{t}_{r}}={{t}_{1}}+\left( r-1 \right)d$ to get ${{r}^{th}}$ term of the A.P. So, ${{t}_{r}}=\dfrac{1}{pqr}+\left( r-1 \right)\dfrac{1}{pqr} \\\ \Rightarrow {{t}_{r}} =\dfrac{1+r-1}{pqr} \\\ \therefore {{t}_{r}} =\dfrac{1}{pq}$ **Hence, the correct option is C.** **Note:** The sequence is an increasing sequence where the common difference is a positive number. We have to take the values $p\ne 0;q\ne 0;r\ne 0$ as then the A.P. becomes obsolete. The common difference will never be calculated according to the difference of greater number from the lesser number.