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Sigma notation for sums

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    What I want to do in this
    video is introduce you
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    to the idea of Sigma notation,
    which will be used extensively
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    through your
    mathematical career.
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    So let's just say you wanted
    to find a sum of some terms,
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    and these terms have a pattern.
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    So let's say you want to
    find the sum of the first 10
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    numbers.
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    So you could say 1
    plus 2 plus 3 plus,
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    and you go all the
    way to plus 9 plus 10.
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    And I clearly could have even
    written this whole thing out,
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    but you can imagine it becomes
    a lot harder if you wanted
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    to find the sum of
    the first 100 numbers.
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    So that would be 1
    plus 2 plus 3 plus,
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    and you would go all
    the way to 99 plus 100.
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    So mathematicians said, well,
    let's find some notation,
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    instead of having to do this
    dot dot dot thing-- which
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    you will see sometimes
    done-- so that we can more
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    cleanly express
    these types of sums.
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    And that's where Sigma
    notation comes from.
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    So this sum up here, right
    over here, this first one,
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    it could be
    represented as Sigma.
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    Use a capital Sigma, this
    Greek letter right over here.
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    And what you do is
    you define an index.
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    And you could start your
    index at some value.
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    So let's say your
    index starts at 1.
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    I'll just use i for index.
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    So let's say that i starts at
    1, and I'm going to go to 10.
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    So i starts at 1,
    and it goes to 10.
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    And I'm going to sum up the i's.
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    So how does this translate
    into this right over here?
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    Well, what you do is you
    start wherever the index is.
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    If the index is at
    1, set i equal to 1.
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    Write the 1 down, and then
    you increment the index.
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    And so i will then
    be equal to 2.
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    i is 2.
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    Put the 2 down.
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    And you're summing each
    of these terms as you go.
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    And you go all the way
    until i is equal to 10.
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    So given what I just
    told you, I encourage
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    you to pause this video and
    write the Sigma notation
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    for this sum right over here.
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    Assuming you've
    given a go at it,
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    well, this would be the sum.
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    The first term,
    well, it might be
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    easy to just say we'll
    start at i equals 1 again.
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    But now we're not going to
    stop until i equals 100,
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    and we're going to
    sum up all of the i's.
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    Let's do another example.
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    Let's imagine the sum from
    i equals 0 to 50 of-- I
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    don't know, let me
    say-- pi i squared.
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    What would this sum look like?
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    And once again, I encourage
    you to pause the video
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    and write it out,
    expand out this sum.
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    Well, let's just
    go step by step.
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    When i equals 0, this will
    be pi times 0 squared.
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    And that's clearly 0,
    but I'll write it out.
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    pi times 0 squared.
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    Then we increase our i.
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    And, well, we make sure
    that we haven't hit this,
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    that our i isn't already
    this top boundary
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    right over here
    or this top value.
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    So now we said i
    equals 1, pi times 1
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    squared-- so plus
    pi times 1 squared.
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    Well, is 1 our top value right
    over here, where we stop?
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    No.
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    So we keep going.
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    So then we go i
    equals 2, pi times 2
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    squared-- so plus
    pi times 2 squared.
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    I think you see
    the pattern here.
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    And we're just going to
    keep going all the way
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    until, at some point-- we're
    going to keeping incrementing
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    our i. i is going to be 49.
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    So it's going to be
    pi times 49 squared.
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    And then finally we increment
    i. i equal becomes 50,
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    and so we're going to have
    plus pi times 50 squared.
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    And then we say,
    OK, our i is finally
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    equal to this top boundary,
    and now we can stop.
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    And so you can
    see this notation,
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    this Sigma notation for this
    sum was a much cleaner way,
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    a much purer way,
    of representing this
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    than having to write
    out the entire sum.
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    But you'll see people switch
    back and forth between the two.
Title:
Sigma notation for sums
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
04:27

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