-
aleph777
- Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
- Posts: 131
- Joined: Fri Jun 18, 2010 10:19 am
- Location: New York, NY
- Thanked: 10 times
Found this one in the 700+ GMAT PREP doc that's floating around. The phrasing seems a little weird to me, and I don't understand how to get the correct answer.
[(-1)^(k+1)][(1/2)^k]. T is the sum of the first 10 k, is t
a. > 2
b. between 1 and 2
c. between ½ and 1
d. between ¼ and ½
e. < ¼
OA: D
I solved for E, though, thinking that (1/2)^k is equal to 2^-k, and therefore k and -k would net zero.
Thanks!
[(-1)^(k+1)][(1/2)^k]. T is the sum of the first 10 k, is t
a. > 2
b. between 1 and 2
c. between ½ and 1
d. between ¼ and ½
e. < ¼
OA: D
I solved for E, though, thinking that (1/2)^k is equal to 2^-k, and therefore k and -k would net zero.
Thanks!

















