Ah! Okay, need help solving 14, and just checking for 16 and 4.

4. I got the series is Divergent by Root Test because you get e > 1

14. I was thinking Maclaurin Series? But it isn't working out properly?

16. I need to find a power series representation and interval of convergence for the given series. I found the power series representation to be:
(-1)^n(n+1)x^n and the lim by Ratio Test comes to abs value of x. Should I be testing endpoints?

Ah Okay need help solving 14 and just checking for 16 and 4 4 I got the series is Divergent by Root Test because you get e gt 1 14 I was thinking Maclaurin Seri class=
Ah Okay need help solving 14 and just checking for 16 and 4 4 I got the series is Divergent by Root Test because you get e gt 1 14 I was thinking Maclaurin Seri class=
Ah Okay need help solving 14 and just checking for 16 and 4 4 I got the series is Divergent by Root Test because you get e gt 1 14 I was thinking Maclaurin Seri class=

Respuesta :

4. Correct. You also could have used the limit test for divergence for the same conclusion (the summand approaches infinity).

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14. I'm guessing the instructions are the same as for 16. Rewrite as

[tex]f(x)=\dfrac4{2x+3}=\dfrac{\frac43}{1-\left(-\frac{2x}3\right)}[/tex]

Now recall that for [tex]|x|<1[/tex], we have

[tex]\dfrac1{1-x}=\displaystyle\sum_{n\ge0}x^n[/tex]

so that for this function, we get

[tex]f(x)=\dfrac43\displaystyle\sum_{n\ge0}\left(-\frac{2x}3\right)^n[/tex]

Because this is a geometric sum, this converges when [tex]\left|-\dfrac{2x}3\right|<1[/tex], or [tex]|x|<\dfrac32[/tex]. This would be the interval of convergence.

Your hunch about checking the endpoints is correct. Checking is easy in this case, because at the endpoints (-3/2 and 3/2) the series obviously diverges.

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16. This one is kind of tricky, and there's more than one way to do it. The standard method would be to take the antiderivative:

[tex]F(x)=\displaystyle\int f(x)\,\mathrm dx=\int\frac{\mathrm dx}{(1+x)^2}=-\frac1{1+x}+C[/tex]

We also have

[tex]\displaystyle-\frac1{1+x}=-\frac1{1-(-x)}=-\sum_{n\ge0}(-x)^n\implies F(x)=C-1-\sum_{n\ge1}(-x)^n[/tex]

and differentiating this gives

[tex]f(x)=-\displaystyle\sum_{n\ge1}n(-x)^{n-1}=-\sum_{n\ge0}(n+1)(-x)^n=\sum_{n\ge0}(n+1)(-1)^{n+1}x^n[/tex]

By the ratio test, this converges when

[tex]\displaystyle\lim_{n\to\infty}\left|\frac{(n+2)(-1)^{n+2}x^{n+1}}{(n+1)(-1)^{n+1}x^n}\right|<1[/tex]

The limit reduces to

[tex]\displaystyle|x|\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{n+2}{n+1}=|x|[/tex]

and so the series converges absolutely for [tex]|x|<1[/tex]. Checking the endpoints is also easy in this case. The factor of [tex]n+1[/tex] is a clear sign that the series will diverge at either extreme.