Wesyu Posted September 29, 2004 Posted September 29, 2004 Anyone knows how to do these? http://www.math.mcgill.ca/jakobson/courses/ma262/a1.pdf
bloodhound Posted September 29, 2004 Posted September 29, 2004 havent done this for a while . but here goes for the first one. use the ratio test see if the limit as n tends to infinity of [math]|a_{n+1}/a_{n}|[/math] exists. where in this case. [math]a_{n}=x^{n}\sum_{i=1}^{n}\frac{1}{i}[/math] so we have [math]|a_{n+1}/a_{n}|=|x\frac{\sum_{i=1}^{n+1}1/i}{\sum_{i=1}^{n}1/i}|[/math] which just converges to |x| as n tends to infinity therefore the series converges if |x|<1 i.e -1<x<1. when x = -1 . the series doesnt converge as [math]\sum_{i=1}^{n}1/i[/math] doesnt converge to 0. and if x =1 the seires doesnt converge as it is the standard harmonic series.
bloodhound Posted September 29, 2004 Posted September 29, 2004 have to think a lot harder for the second one. its quite easy to show that it does indeed converge for some x . but what i dont know. it does defintely converge if -1/10 < x < 1/10 . but that is the radius of convergence for the comaprision series i used to check if the original series converges.
bloodhound Posted September 29, 2004 Posted September 29, 2004 for the comparision for the second question , i used . [math]\sum_{n=1}^{\infty}\frac{10^{n}x^{n}}{n}[/math]
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