dealing with trig series

iDoof

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Oct 17, 2005
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What kind of test should I use to determine the convergence of such infinite series as:

SUM of (sin(n*pi/2))/n! from n=1 to infinity?

It's an alternating series...but I'm not quite sure how to employ the Alternating Series Test because there's no explicit (-1)^n+1 power in it...does that make sense? If that DOESN'T make sense, could someone just walk me through how to do this?

Thanks so much
 
G'day, iDoof.

You see that it is an alternating series but you haven't quite completed the link.

Write out a few terms:
1 - 1/3! + 1/5! - 1/7! + ...

There's no trig there. Can you write a new summation for this?
 
Hello, iDoof!

Unco said:
Write out a few terms: .\(\displaystyle 1\,-\,\frac{1}{3!}\,+\,\frac{1}{5!}\,-\,\frac{1}{7!}\,+\,\cdots\)
Do you recognize this series?

Are you familiar with: .\(\displaystyle \sin x\:=\:x\,-\,\frac{x^3}{3!}\,+\,\frac{x^5}{5!}\,-\,\frac{x^7}{7!}\,+\,\cdots\)

That's right! . . . the sum is: \(\displaystyle \sin(1)\)
 
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