Class 9 Maths Ganita Manjari Chapter 8 Solutions (NCERT 2026–27) – Predicting What Comes Next: Exploring Sequences and Progressions
These Class 9 Maths Ganita Manjari Chapter 8 solutions cover Predicting What Comes Next: Exploring Sequences and Progressions from the new NCF-2023 textbook (2026–27). Every exercise is solved step by step — sequences, arithmetic progressions (AP) and geometric progressions (GP) — so you can revise the whole chapter quickly.
Chapter 8 Overview
Chapter 8 of Ganita Manjari, Predicting What Comes Next: Exploring Sequences and Progressions, studies number patterns. It defines a sequence and its nth-term rule (explicit and recursive), then two special families: an arithmetic progression (AP) with constant common difference d and nth term a + (n − 1)d, and a geometric progression (GP) with constant common ratio r and nth term arn−1. The Class 9 Maths Ganita Manjari Chapter 8 solutions below work through every exercise step by step.
Key Concepts
Sequence: an ordered list of numbers; the nth term tn may be given by an explicit rule or a recursive rule.
Arithmetic progression (AP): consecutive terms differ by a constant common difference d.
Geometric progression (GP): consecutive terms have a constant common ratio r.
Explicit rule gives tn directly in terms of n; a recursive rule gives each term from the previous one(s).
Key Formulas
AP: a, a + d, a + 2d, … ; nth term tn = a + (n − 1)d.
GP: a, ar, ar2, … ; nth term tn = arn−1.
Common difference d = tn − tn−1; common ratio r = tn / tn−1.
Sum of the first n natural numbers = n(n + 1)/2.
Exercise Set 8.1
1. Find the first five terms of the sequence whose nth term is (i) tn = 3n − 4, (ii) tn = 2 − 5n, (iii) tn = n2 − 2n + 3 (n ≥ 1).
2. Find the 10th and 15th terms of the sequence tn = 5n − 3 (n ≥ 1).
3. Determine whether 97 and 172 are terms of tn = 5n − 3 (n ≥ 1).
4. Which term of tn = 5n − 3 (n ≥ 1) is 607?
5. A sequence has t1 = −5, tn+1 = tn + 3 (n ≥ 1). Find the first five terms. Is 52 a term? If so, which?
6. Let T1 = 1, T2 = 2, T3 = 4, and Tn = Tn−1 + Tn−2 + Tn−3 for n ≥ 4. Find T4, T5, T6, T7, T8.
Exercise Set 8.2
1. Find the 10th and 26th terms of the AP: 3, 8, 13, 18, …
2. Which term of the AP 21, 18, 15, … is −81? Is 0 a term? Give reasons.
3. Find the nth term of the AP 11, 8, 5, 2, … and write its recursive rule.
4. An AP of 50 terms has 3rd term 12 and last term 106. Find the 29th term.
5. How many 2-digit numbers are divisible by 3? What is their sum?
6. Harish started at an annual salary of ₹5,00,000 with an increment of ₹20,000 each year. After how many years did his income reach ₹7,00,000?
7. Marbles are arranged with 1 in the first row, 2 in the second, …, up to 25 rows. How many marbles in all?
Exercise Set 8.3
1. Find the 12th term of a GP with common ratio 2 whose 8th term is 192.
2. Find the 10th and nth terms of the GP: 5, 25, 125, …
*3. A sequence has t1 = 2, tn+1 = 3tn − 2 (n ≥ 1). Which term is 730?
4. Which term of the GP: 2, 6, 18, … is 4374? Write the explicit and recursive formulas.
5. A ball dropped from 80 m bounces to 60% of its previous height each time. (i) What height does it reach after the 5th bounce? (ii) Total vertical distance travelled by the time it hits the ground the 6th time?
6. Which term of the sequence 2, 2√2, 4, … is 128?
7. Sierpiński square carpet (Fig. 8.12): at each stage each shaded square is divided into 9 and the centre removed. (i) Red squares in Stages 0–3. (ii) Predict Stages 4 and 5. (iii) Rule for the nth stage (explicit + recursive). (iv) If Stage 0 area = 1, find the red area at Stages 1–5 and the nth stage; what happens as n increases?
Class 9 Maths Ganita Manjari Chapter 8 Solutions — End-of-Chapter Exercises
1. Find the 31st term of an AP whose 11th term is 38 and 16th term is 73.
2. Determine the AP whose 3rd term is 16 and whose 7th term exceeds the 5th term by 12.
*3. How many three-digit numbers are divisible by 7?
*4. How many multiples of 4 lie between 10 and 250?
*5. Find a GP for which the sum of the first two terms is −4 and the fifth term is 4 times the third term.
*6. Find all ways of expressing 100 as a sum of consecutive natural numbers.
*7. Bacteria double every hour, starting with 30. How many at the end of the 2nd hour, 4th hour and nth hour?
*8. The sum of the 4th and 8th terms of an AP is 24, and the sum of the 6th and 10th terms is 44. Find the first three terms.
*9. Find the smallest n such that the sum of the first n natural numbers exceeds 1000.
*10. Which term of the GP: 2, 8, 32, … is 131072? Write the explicit and recursive formulas.
*11. The sum of the first three terms of a GP is 13/12 and their product is −1. Find the common ratio and the terms.
*12. If the 4th, 10th and 16th terms of a GP are x, y and z, prove that x, y, z are in GP.
*13. The sum of the first three terms of a GP is 26 and the sum of their squares is 364. Find the terms.
*14. P1 = 1, P2 = 2, and for n > 2, Pn = P1 + P2 + … + Pn−1 + 1. Find P1…P8; a simpler recursive and explicit formula.
*15. W1 = 1, W2 = 2, and for n > 2, Wn = W1 + W2 + … + Wn−2 + 2. Find W1…W8. Do you recognise it?
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Watch out for these
- Using n instead of (n − 1) in tn = a + (n − 1)d or arn−1.
- Confusing common difference (AP, subtract) with common ratio (GP, divide).
- Sign errors with a negative common difference or ratio.
- When checking if a value is a term, accept it only if n is a positive whole number.
- For counting terms in an AP, use (last − first)/d + 1 — don’t forget the “+ 1”.
- Mixing up explicit and recursive rules.
Practice MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The nth term of an AP with first term a and common difference d is:
(a) a + nd (b) a + (n − 1)d (c) arn−1 (d) a + (n + 1)d
2. The nth term of a GP with first term a and common ratio r is:
(a) a + (n − 1)r (b) arn (c) arn−1 (d) nar
3. The common difference of the AP 3, 8, 13, 18, … is:
(a) 3 (b) 5 (c) 8 (d) 2
4. The common ratio of the GP 2, 6, 18, … is:
(a) 2 (b) 3 (c) 4 (d) 6
5. The 10th term of the AP 2, 5, 8, … is:
(a) 27 (b) 29 (c) 30 (d) 32
6. Which sequence is an AP?
(a) 2, 4, 8, 16 (b) 1, 4, 9, 16 (c) 2, 4, 6, 8 (d) 1, 2, 4, 7
7. The 5th term of the GP 1, 2, 4, … is:
(a) 8 (b) 16 (c) 32 (d) 10
8. The 3rd term of an AP with a = 5 and d = −2 is:
(a) 1 (b) 3 (c) −1 (d) 7
9. The sum 1 + 2 + 3 + … + n equals:
(a) n2 (b) n(n + 1) (c) n(n + 1)/2 (d) n/2
10. In a GP, the common ratio r equals:
(a) tn − tn−1 (b) tn + tn−1 (c) tn / tn−1 (d) tn−1 / tn
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: 2, 4, 6, 8, … is an arithmetic progression.
Reason: The difference between consecutive terms is constant.
A-R 2. Assertion: 3, 6, 12, 24, … is a geometric progression.
Reason: The ratio of consecutive terms is constant.
A-R 3. Assertion: The nth term of an AP is a + (n − 1)d.
Reason: Each term is obtained by adding d to the previous term.
A-R 4. Assertion: 1, 2, 4, 7, 11, … is an arithmetic progression.
Reason: An arithmetic progression has a constant common difference.
A-R 5. Assertion: The common ratio of a GP can be negative.
Reason: A GP has the form a, ar, ar2, … where r may be any non-zero number.
Quick Revision Summary
- A sequence is an ordered list with an nth-term rule (explicit or recursive).
- AP: constant common difference d; tn = a + (n − 1)d.
- GP: constant common ratio r; tn = arn−1.
- To check if a value is a term, solve for n and require a positive whole number.
- Number of terms of an AP = (last − first)/d + 1.
- The Fibonacci (Virāhānka) sequence adds the two previous terms: 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, …
How to score full marks in this chapter
Identify a and d (for AP) or a and r (for GP) first, then apply the nth-term formula. Write both the explicit and the recursive rule when asked. For “which term” problems, set tn equal to the value and check that n is a positive integer.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 9 Maths Ganita Manjari Chapter 8 about?
Sequences and progressions — the nth-term rule of a sequence, arithmetic progressions (AP) and geometric progressions (GP).
What is the nth term of an AP?
tn = a + (n − 1)d, where a is the first term and d the common difference.
What is the nth term of a GP?
tn = arn−1, where a is the first term and r the common ratio.
Are these Class 9 Maths Ganita Manjari Chapter 8 solutions free?
Yes. All solutions are free and follow the official NCERT Ganita Manjari textbook for 2026–27.
