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∑ (2l+1)=n²; here l takes on the values from l=0 , 1, 2,...........n-1.
i've seen that it was written as
(2n+1)= n+ 2(sum of natural numbers)...
how can we replace l with n in the summation..????
Are you thinking of:
which can be rearranged to give:
or how to prove that those are true?
To prove it in the second form (Since that's the one you showed in your post)
Last edited by luca-deltodesco (2009-02-26 00:43:07)
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it is not "i" in the summation. it is "L"
∑ (2L+1) = ∑ (2n+1) = n+(sum of natural numbers)= n+2 {n(n-1)/2}=n² . this is wat iam looking for.. how 2L+1 written as 2n+1.
The letter you pick for your index variable doesn't matter. Sometimes j or k is used instead of i. But your line ∑ (2L+1) = ∑ (2n+1) = n² is incorrect.
The variable n represents the the largest number you are summing to (from 0 to n, perhaps). The i is just a place holder to let you know how far along your summation you are.
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