LaTeX LaTex and solution for an infinite series

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The discussion centers on the infinite series 1 - 2^{-1/2} + 3^{-1/2} - 4^{-1/2} + 5^{-1/2} ..., which can be expressed in LaTeX as the sum Σ_{n=1}^∞ (-1)^{n-1}/√n. This series is identified as an alternating Leibniz series, which converges because its general term decreases monotonically to zero and alternates in sign. A contributor also provided links to resources for learning LaTeX and additional mathematical context, including the Dirichlet eta function.
Loren Booda
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What is the LaTex and infinite sum for 1-2-1/2+3-1/2-4-1/2+5-1/2 . . .

Does it converge anyway?

I am too old for this to be a school assignment.
 
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Loren Booda said:
What is the LaTex and infinite sum for 1-2-1/2+3-1/2-4-1/2+5-1/2 . . .

Does it converge anyway?

I am too old for this to be a school assignment.

A PF contributor that doesn't know LaTeX? Strange...anyway: 1-2^{-1/2}+3^{-1/2}-4^{-1/2}+...=1-\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}+\frac{1}{\sqrt{3}}-\frac{1}{\sqrt{4}}+...=\sum_{n=1}^\infty\frac{(-1)^{n-1}}{\sqrt{n}}

The sum converges as it is an alternating Leibnitz series: the general term sequence converges monotonically to zero and we have alternating signs.

DonAntonio
 

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