Q.59 Let a0 = 0 and define an =½(1 + an−1) for all positive integers n ≥ 1. The least value of n for which |1 − an| < 1 / 210 is ______. (Answer in integer)

Q.59 Let a0 = 0 and define an =½(1 + an−1) for all positive integers n ≥ 1.
The least value of n for which |1 − an| < 1 / 210 is ______.
(Answer in integer)

Least n for |1 − an| < 1/210 in Newton Sequence

The sequence defined by
a0 = 0 and
an = ½(1 + an−1) for n ≥ 1
converges to 1. The error decreases geometrically, halving at each iteration.

The least value of n such that
|1 − an| < 1/210 is:

Correct Answer

n = 11

Sequence Convergence

The recurrence relation

an = ½(1 + an−1)

is equivalent to the Newton–Raphson iteration for solving
x² − x = 0, starting from a0 = 0.
The iteration converges to the root x = 1.

Unrolling the recurrence gives the closed-form solution:

an = 1 − 2−n

Therefore, the error is exactly:

|1 − an| = 2−n

This shows that the error halves at each step:

|1 − an| = ½ |1 − an−1|

Solving the Inequality

We require:

2−n < 2−10

Taking powers of 2 on both sides:

n > 10

Checking Values

  • n = 10:
    |1 − a10| = 2−10 = 1/1024 (equal, not strictly less ❌)
  • n = 11:
    |1 − a11| = 2−11 = 1/2048 < 1/1024 ✔

Hence, the least positive integer satisfying the condition is n = 11.

Option Analysis (Exam Perspective)

  • n = 9: Error = 1/512 > 1/1024 (too large)
  • n = 10: Error = 1/1024 (fails strict inequality)
  • n = 11: First value satisfying the condition ✔
  • n > 11: Valid but not the least

 

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