Hi
I'm new here and was looking to get some help on my calculus homework. I need a confirmation on the Test for Divergent for series. So if the limit of a series is infinity does it diverge by Test for Divergent?
I also need help on this problem.
n=1 to infinity of the sum of (sqrt(n+2)-2sqrt(n+1)+sqrt(n))
How do I even start? I tried using limit and when I manipulated it I ended with 0/0. Thus, I asked the previous question.
Thank you
Edit:
Sorry, I replied like 5 times 5 hours ago and it seems that it still hasn't been reviewed or something. Is it always like this in this website?
Anyways I'll just reply through edits here.
What I did was multiplying the series equation to (-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)) / (-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)). Then I factored out sqrt(n^2) on both the numerator and denominator. Then I found that the limit of it equals to 0/0.
Step 1: (sqrt(n+2)-2sqrt(n+1)+sqrt(n)) x [(-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)) / (-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n))]
Step 2: [-6n+4sqrt(n^2+3n+2)-2sqrt(n^2+2n)+4sqrt(n^2+n)-3] / [-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)]
Step 3: [sqrt(n^2) (-6+4sqrt(1+3/n+2/n^2)-2sqrt(1+2/n)+4sqrt(1+1/n)-3/n)] / [sqrt(n^2) (-sqrt(1/n+2/n^2)+2sqrt(1/n+1/n^2)-sqrt(1/n))]
Step 4: lim of the above equation as n approaches infinity = 0/0 Which means DNE? Therefore it is diverges by Test for Divergence? <--This is the part where I'm wondering if it is correct to apply it here.
Is there a way to show my work better? I feel that typing it out looks messy. Is there a coding outline here to use for math symbols?
Edit 2:
Oh didn't think of that.
Okay, I got 1-sqrt(2)-sqrt(n+1)+sqrt(n+2) in which the limit as n approaches 0 is infinity. Does this mean it is divergent by Telescoping Series?
If so can Test for Divergence still work which is shown on my original work.
I'm new here and was looking to get some help on my calculus homework. I need a confirmation on the Test for Divergent for series. So if the limit of a series is infinity does it diverge by Test for Divergent?
I also need help on this problem.
n=1 to infinity of the sum of (sqrt(n+2)-2sqrt(n+1)+sqrt(n))
How do I even start? I tried using limit and when I manipulated it I ended with 0/0. Thus, I asked the previous question.
Thank you
Edit:
Sorry, I replied like 5 times 5 hours ago and it seems that it still hasn't been reviewed or something. Is it always like this in this website?
Anyways I'll just reply through edits here.
What I did was multiplying the series equation to (-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)) / (-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)). Then I factored out sqrt(n^2) on both the numerator and denominator. Then I found that the limit of it equals to 0/0.
Step 1: (sqrt(n+2)-2sqrt(n+1)+sqrt(n)) x [(-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)) / (-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n))]
Step 2: [-6n+4sqrt(n^2+3n+2)-2sqrt(n^2+2n)+4sqrt(n^2+n)-3] / [-sqrt(n+2)+2sqrt(n+1)-sqrt(n)]
Step 3: [sqrt(n^2) (-6+4sqrt(1+3/n+2/n^2)-2sqrt(1+2/n)+4sqrt(1+1/n)-3/n)] / [sqrt(n^2) (-sqrt(1/n+2/n^2)+2sqrt(1/n+1/n^2)-sqrt(1/n))]
Step 4: lim of the above equation as n approaches infinity = 0/0 Which means DNE? Therefore it is diverges by Test for Divergence? <--This is the part where I'm wondering if it is correct to apply it here.
Is there a way to show my work better? I feel that typing it out looks messy. Is there a coding outline here to use for math symbols?
Edit 2:
Write out some of the first expressions in staggered fashion and see if there if there is a telescoping sum.
Oh didn't think of that.
Okay, I got 1-sqrt(2)-sqrt(n+1)+sqrt(n+2) in which the limit as n approaches 0 is infinity. Does this mean it is divergent by Telescoping Series?
If so can Test for Divergence still work which is shown on my original work.
Last edited: