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Ian H
Lv 7
Ian H asked in Science & MathematicsMathematics · 6 months ago

A DIVERSION for your entertainment?

We know that the harmonic series diverges 

H = 1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + 1/5 + ... = inf

The sum of reciprocals of square roots, namely

S = 1/√(1) + 1/√(2) + 1/√(3) + 1/√(4) + 1/√(5) + 1/√(6) + 1/√(7) + 1/√(8)

must also diverge, (because the denominators are all smaller).

But suppose we divide the inf sum S into two parts, like this

Let O be the inf sum with odd terms, O = 1/√(1) + 1/√(3) + 1/√(5) + 1/√(7)

and let E be the sum with even terms, E = 1/√(2) + 1/√(4) + 1/√(6) + 1/√(8)

We have arranged that O + E = S, term by term, but consider the series √(2)E

√(2)E = √(2)/√(2) + √(2)/√(4) + √(2)/√(6) + √(2)/√(8) + ...

√(2)E = 1/√(1) + 1/√(2) + 1/√(3) + 1/√(4) = S = E + O, so now we have

O = [√(2) – 1]E ~ 0.4142E

This result tells us that the odd sum is less than the even sum! But odd terms of the form 1/√(2n - 1) are larger than corresponding even terms 1/√(2n) which means that this is impossible. They both diverge of course, but which sum to n terms is larger? Jacob Bernoulli remarked on this apparent paradox.

Spoiler alert

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A quick calculation comparing 1000 terms resolves the issue.

Σ1/√(2n) ~ 43.6999

Σ1/√(2n - 1) ~ 44.2936

Although they both head off to infinity, comparable odd terms are always larger, so that series O is always slightly ahead at any intermediate stage.

The apparent result O ~ 0.4142E was just wrong.

But can you explain why?

1 Answer

Relevance
  • 6 months ago

    Ordinary rules of algebra do not apply to divergent infinite series. You often get different results when you change the order of terms or the grouping of terms. Diverging series are not commutative or associative. 

    The usual rules of algebra do work for absolutely convergent series. 

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