Calculating Sums of Infinite Series for Nille

nille40
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Hi all!
I was wondering which method one should use to find the actual sum of an infinite series. I know how to find the sum of a geometric series (if it converges), but how could I find the sum for, for instance
<br /> \sum_{n=0}^\infty\left(\frac{n+5}{5n+1}\right)^n<br />

I know that it converges, and the sum appears to be 2. But how can I calculate this?

Or how about
<br /> \sum_{n=0}^\infty\frac{\cos n\pi}{1+n^2}<br />

Thanks in advance,
Nille
 
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There is no general method for determining the sum of an infinite series.
 
What if we try to find the sum to n terms and then taking lim n\rightarrow\infty
 
The answer to the first one is 2.5746952396343726343 Hope that will help
 
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The second one is a defined convergent series:

\sum_{n=0}^\infty\frac{\cos n\pi}{1+n^2}=\frac12\left(1+\pi{\rm csch}(\pi)\right)

where csch(z) gives the hyperbolic cosecant of z, or in other words: csch(z)=1/sinh(z).
 
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How You guys reach this conclusions I have read a little about convergence and divergence but don't know how you summed up the series
 
Originally posted by nille40
<br /> \sum_{n=0}^\infty\frac{\cos n\pi}{1+n^2}<br />

This one does not involve hyperbolic trig functions.

Taylor series.
 
laura: would you mind explaining further? Since the sum, as written, is clearly not a Taylor series, do you mean that it can be converted to one and then summed? If so, how? It's certainly not obvious to me!
 

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