Question 1175621:  A man buys premium bonds every year . In the first year , he buys sh.2000 worth of bonds . If every year he increases his annual investments in bonds by sh.600 , how long will he take for his total investment in bonds to be sh.37000 
 Found 2 solutions by  greenestamps, Boreal: Answer by greenestamps(13214)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! 
  
His investments for each year form an arithmetic sequence:
  
2000, 2600, 3200, 3800, 4400, 5000, 5600, 6200, 6800, ...
  
The fastest path to the answer is to add up the successive amounts until the total reaches 37000 or more.  You will quickly find that his total investment over 8 years is less than 37000 and the total over 9 years is greater then 37000.
  
For an algebraic solution, using the formula for the sum of an arithmetic sequence....
  
first payment: 2000 
payment in n-th year: 2000+600(n-1) = 1400+600n
  
Since the sequence is arithmetic, the sum of payments over n years is the number of years, multiplied by the average of the amounts from the first and last years:
  
 
  
We want that sum to be 37000:
  
  
  
  
 
  
That quadratic does not factor; you need to find the solution using the quadratic formula or a graphing calculator.  Of those two options, clearly the graphing calculator is more efficient.
  
But you found the answer much faster by performing a few simple additions....
  
 
 Answer by Boreal(15235)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! a1=2000 
a2=3200 
an=2000+(n-1)600 
sum=(n/2)(2a+(n-1)d) 
37000=(n/2)(4000+(n-1)600) 
74000=n(4000+600n-600))=3400n+600n^2 
600n^2+3400n-74000=0 
6n^2+34n-740=0 
3n^2+17n-370=0
 
n=(1/6)(-17+ sqrt (4729)); sqrt term=68.76 
n=51.76/6 or 8.6 years 
between the 8th and 9th years.
 
2000 
2600 
3200 
3800 
4400 
sum for 5 years is 16000 
then  
5000 (21000) 
5600 (26600) 
6200 (32800) 
6800 (39600) on year 9
 
 
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