Finite Geometric Series Sum Calculator

Enter values and compare finite geometric series behavior. See formulas, tables, exports, and practical steps. Get fast sums with clear working for every entry.

Calculator

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Example Data Table

First Term Common Ratio Terms Sum Last Term
5 2 6 315 160
120 0.5 5 232.5 7.5
3 -2 4 -15 -24
10 1 8 80 10

Formula Used

For a finite geometric series, the main formula is:

Sₙ = a(1 - rⁿ) / (1 - r), when r ≠ 1.

When the ratio equals one, every term is the same. The formula becomes:

Sₙ = a × n.

Here, a is the first term. The value r is the common ratio. The value n is the number of terms. The last term is calculated as a × rⁿ⁻¹.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select the calculation type.
  2. Enter the known values in the form.
  3. Use target sum when finding a missing value.
  4. Set ratio search limits when solving for ratio.
  5. Choose decimal precision for rounded output.
  6. Press the calculate button.
  7. Review the result table and term table.
  8. Download CSV or PDF when needed.

Finite Geometric Series Guide

A finite geometric series adds a limited number of related terms. Each term is made by multiplying the previous term by one fixed ratio. This calculator helps you check that pattern quickly. It supports direct sum work, missing first term work, ratio searching, and term count estimates. That makes it useful for homework, finance checks, growth models, and spreadsheet review.

Why finite series matter

Finite series appear whenever repeated multiplication stops after a set number of steps. Savings deposits, population changes, equipment decay, digital storage growth, and pattern puzzles can all use this idea. The result is not only the final term. The total of all terms often matters more. A small ratio can create a stable total. A large ratio can make later terms dominate the answer.

Choosing the right inputs

Start with the first term. It is the value at position one. Then enter the common ratio. This number tells how each term changes. Enter the number of terms when you know the series length. Use the target sum when you want a missing value. For ratio searches, choose a sensible minimum and maximum range. A narrow range gives a cleaner result.

Reading the results

The calculator returns the sum, last term, average term, pattern type, and a term table. The term table is helpful because it shows each term and each running total. Use it to find mistakes in signs, decimals, and rounding. Negative ratios create alternating signs. A ratio of one creates a constant series. Ratios between zero and one shrink each term.

Practical accuracy tips

Always match units before entering data. Do not mix dollars with cents or months with years. Use more decimals when the ratio is close to one. Very long series may create large values, so review the displayed term count. For exact classroom answers, keep the formula form beside the rounded answer. Then compare each step with the table before exporting your result.

Exporting and checking

Use the export buttons after calculation. The comma file suits worksheets. The document file suits notes. Keep both when sharing a solution. Record the inputs, not only the answer, because small ratio changes can alter every total and final result table.

FAQs

What is a finite geometric series?

It is a sum of terms where each term is found by multiplying the previous term by one fixed ratio. It stops after a chosen number of terms.

What does the first term mean?

The first term is the starting value of the series. It is usually written as a. Every later term depends on this value and the common ratio.

What is the common ratio?

The common ratio is the multiplier between consecutive terms. Divide any term by the term before it to find the ratio, when the previous term is not zero.

What happens when the ratio is one?

All terms are equal. The sum is simply the first term multiplied by the number of terms, so the calculator uses Sₙ = a × n.

Can the ratio be negative?

Yes. A negative ratio creates alternating signs. The calculator supports negative ratios for sum calculations and ratio searches inside the selected search range.

Why does ratio search need a range?

Some equations can have more than one possible ratio. A search range helps the calculator look in the area you expect and return a useful numerical result.

Why is term count rounded up?

Term count must usually be a whole number. When the exact value is decimal, rounding up shows the first whole term count that reaches or passes the calculation step.

Can I export the calculation?

Yes. After calculation, use the CSV button for spreadsheets or the PDF button for a printable summary with inputs, results, and displayed terms.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.