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MATH1251 Questions HELP (4 Viewers)

InteGrand

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Thanks for that, I'll figure (3) out now too... Got another one, from series this time, I'm completely stuck:
a) Actually follows immediately from the p-series test (here, it's summing 1/n^p, where p = 1/2 < 1 ==> divergence).

 
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InteGrand

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Part b) is a famous elementary proof of the Harmonic series' divergence:

S = 1 + (1/2 + 1/3) + (1/4 + 1/5 + 1/6 + 1/7) + (1/8 + 1/9 + 1/10 + 1/11 + 1/12 + 1/13 + 1/14 + 1/15) + ...

> 1 + (1/4 + 1/4) + (1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8) + (1/16 + 1/16 + 1/16 + 1/16 + 1/16 + 1/16 + 1/16 + 1/16) + ...

= 1 + 1/2 + 1/2 + 1/2 + ...

= ∞,

so the Harmonic series diverges.

Edit: Just realised the Q. wanted a different bracketing to the one I did here. But it's the same idea, and you should be able to do it their way if you understand what was done here.
 
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Paradoxica

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Alternatively, using the simple fact that



The sum is reduced to a telescopic inequality, and it is trivial to obtain:



And so the infinite sum clearly diverges.
 

leehuan

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Both sides are the same.
Oh lol I see now, whoops.

Thanks IG, leehuan and Paradoxica:

leehuan, how'd you get rid of the equality in this one?:




Also, is this correct?

Yeah your /img is right. We did that one in my tutorial. Just compare.

Technically they aren't equal and I should've just used > and not \ge
 

Paradoxica

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Oh lol I see now, whoops.



Yeah your /img is right. We did that one in my tutorial. Just compare.

they aren't equal and I should've just used > and not \ge
if at least one term in the inequality sum isn't equal, then it's unequal. FTFY.

note the same holds true for integrals, if two functions are equal at a finite number of points, then provides one is larger than the other over the domain of integration, the integrals are not equal.
 

1008

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Thanks guys.

How'd you do this one?



I'm guessing it's really simple comparison like the one I posted above, just can think of the proper one...
 

1008

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Oh yeah, in the question book they said it was safe to assume that the sequences are non-negative. I think he just forgot to mention that.
I don't think it says it's safe to assume that for this question.... Here's the proper screenshot:

 

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