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Hi all. I wonder if anyone out there can help me find the sum of this infinite series (or at least point me in the right direction):
Edit: Fixed my Ratio Test.
Last edited by davidi (2008-11-06 08:26:42)
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Now you can use a similar method to write that new summation as some constant (or maybe you already know a formula that will do that )
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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Awesome, I think you solved it!
5S looks like a geometric series to me...
Edit: fixed S = 6/25.
Last edited by davidi (2008-11-06 08:25:03)
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Nearly, but that 5 on the denominator gets squared rather than cancelled.
S = 6/25.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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Haha, yes, of course. It's been a long day
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Mathsys method is the based on the general method used to evaluate series of the form
(assuming that it converges) where the
form an arithmetic progress and the form a geometric progression. (In your example, .)Suppose the common difference is
and the common ratio is . Then the series can be written asIf you multiply both sides by
, you getSubtracting the second from the first yields
If
, the RHS converges toHence
In your example,
; hence .Last edited by JaneFairfax (2008-11-07 08:16:56)
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I'm curious about this now. I think that if you have a sum that looks like:
Therefore, using this until you end up with a polynomial of degree 0 (a constant), it should be possible to evaluate that top summation for any p and a that fit the restrictions.
But is there a nice formula, or another way to do it without recursion?
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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