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Given the following:
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I plotted the first few hundred points of a_n, and it seems that the function diverges away from 0 in the negative direction. So, if you were to sum the infinite series, you'd just get - ∞.
I think you might have made a mistake with the function, though. As it is, it involves dividing by 0 when n = 1, so that indicates that something might be wrong. Plus, -∞ isn't a very satisfying answer.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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I plotted the first few hundred points of a_n, and it seems that the function diverges away from 0 in the negative direction. So, if you were to sum the infinite series, you'd just get - ∞.
The
, as you suggested, indeed.I think you might have made a mistake with the function, though. As it is, it involves dividing by 0 when n = 1, so that indicates that something might be wrong. Plus, -∞ isn't a very satisfying answer.
This is no mistake, it's exactly what I got for one of my math exams.
The thing which I want to know is how you solve a summation, as all the books I have don't really show me a structured way to do it.
Another summation
Do you just plot a few points to see where it goes, and then you see if it goes to infinity, 1, 0, -1 or -infinity, or is there a more precise method (which is easy to understand )?
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Not that I know of. Your second example will have a more interesting answer, though, because it converges to 0, meaning that its sum will be finite.
[Disclaimer: I'm not at all good with LaTeX, so some of this stuff is likely to come out badly.]
There is a standard formula that we can use to help us:
We can split the summation up and rearrange it so that we can use this formula on it:
However, because the starting value is 3, and the above formula works with a starting value of 1, we need to take away the summation from n=1 to n=2 to compensate.
Using the above formula, this works out to be:
7/0.5 - 1/0.8 - (0.75*7/0.5 - 0.96/0.8) = 3.45
And there you go. The summation of the infinite series is 3.45
I probably could have said that 5 times faster if I wasn't trying to use LaTeX.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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There is a standard formula that we can use to help us:
With an infinite series, wouldn't this amount to the following?
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That's right, but as (1/5)^∞ = 0, that's the same as 1/(4/5) = 5/4.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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Point taken.
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I am completely lost...
nothing can beat the power of science
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That's just because the maths discussed here is at A-level level and you're in year 7 and so haven't learnt this yet.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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For anyone who may be a bit lost "∑" just means to add up a lot!
Example:
It says to use the numbers from 1 to 5 (the n=1 at the bottom tells where to start, and the 5 at the top tells where to end), and whatever you see after the "∑" is what to do with the numbers before adding them (in this case multiply by 2)
So it is just saying: "2×1 + 2×2 + 2×3 + 2×4 + 2×5"
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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Sorry, if I made a mistake, but I think:
Last edited by krassi_holmz (2005-12-17 00:55:20)
IPBLE: Increasing Performance By Lowering Expectations.
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Your mistake is here:
The first
in the numerator shouldn't be there.Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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2+4+8= (8-1)/(2-1) or 2+4+8=2(8-1)/(2-1), e.a
14=7 or 14=14?
I'm sure that
Last edited by krassi_holmz (2005-12-17 07:17:13)
IPBLE: Increasing Performance By Lowering Expectations.
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The formula you're thinking of is:
In this case, n = 1, so the specific formula would be:
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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Why are we disputing something fundamental?
IPBLE: Increasing Performance By Lowering Expectations.
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http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GeometricSeries.html
Are we clear now?
IPBLE: Increasing Performance By Lowering Expectations.
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Wow. Sorry. I checked the textbook that I was reading, and I misread the formula. You're absolutely right, which means that your answer of 1.74 is right too.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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And what did everybody draw from this lesson?
was here anything else posted? I don't think so.
[Yes. Yes there was. *points to 'last edited by...' tag*]
Last edited by krassi_holmz (2005-12-17 09:07:31)
IPBLE: Increasing Performance By Lowering Expectations.
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Except that you made the mistake of saying that you don't make mistakes. That means that when you do make a mistake, you'll look silly because you said that you don't make mistakes, but you would have just made a mistake. That's a mistake, so now you look silly because you said that you don't make mistakes, but you just made a mistake, you mistake maker, you.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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Me what?
What a mistake?
IPBLE: Increasing Performance By Lowering Expectations.
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The mistake of trying to make a mod look silly, of course.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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So, we could replace the last 10 posts with mathsy saying "Yes, you were right" ?
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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Why did you moderated me so brutally?
And now earnest.
Yes, your answer is just great! You deserve to be a moderator!(this was about the mathsy)
Last edited by krassi_holmz (2005-12-17 09:30:03)
IPBLE: Increasing Performance By Lowering Expectations.
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You guys should really make it as simple as possible... It's just a geometric series....
(1 + (r)^2 + (r)^3 +. . . + (r)^n ) converges IF : |r| < 1
then the infinite series converges to 1/(1-r).
You can easily check this to find what SERIES: (7/(2^i) - (1/(5^i)) converges to. Although the series starts
at i=3, all you would need to do is pull out a 1/8 for the 1/(2^i) series and 1/125 for the 1/(5^i) series. I hope the rest is clear.;)
I think you'd actually have to pull out ((1/2)^3)*((1/2)^2)*(1/2) for the first to return the index to 0 and not 2 but as my name says I haven't done this in a while and am here looking up how it is done for my convolution sums homework. hehe ^^
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