Hard Laurent series. A little lost.

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on finding the Laurent series for the function \(\frac{z+2}{z^{5}-8z^{2}}\) in the region \(2<|z|<\infty\). The user successfully factored out \(z^{5}\) from the denominator, leading to a geometric series representation. The next steps involve multiplying out the series and collecting terms to express it in the standard form of a Laurent series. The final expression includes terms of the form \(2^n/z^{n+4}\) and \(2^{3n+2}/z^{3n+6}\), indicating a clear pattern for the series.

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Homework Statement


find the Laurent series for

\frac{z+2}{z^{5}-8z^{2}} in 2<|z|<\infty


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


Well, I factored out z^{5} in the denominator, which left me with a geometric sum (since |z|>2). I've come up with \frac{z+2}{z^{5}}\sum\frac{8}{z^{3}}^{n}

I'm not sure if I'm going in the right direction, but if I am, could someone please give me a hint at what to look at next.
 
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Looks good so far. Just multiply out and collect terms now.
 
When you say multiply out and collect terms, do you mean I need to write it out as:

8(z+2)/z^8 + 8^2(z+2)/z^11 + ... (tried to type it in latex, but it calculated it back to f(z)... impressive!)

and that is the Laurent series?
 
You need to multiply it out completely so you're just left with a constant times a power of z for each term.
 
I think I've got it.

Sum from n=3 -> infinity of 2^n/z^(n+4) - Sum from n=3 -> infinity of 2^(3n+2)/z^(3n+6)

because when I multiply and combine terms I get 2^3/z^7+2^4/z^8+2^6/z^10+2^7/z^11+...

I'm sorry about my format, latex is too smart for me.
 
Now that I've got the infinite sum, should I write it out as the difference of two summations? Or is it typically acceptable to write it out as the sum of terms with a clear pattern? I will go and ask my professor about his preferred notation anyhow.
 
It's a judgment call, so asking your professor is a good idea in case he or she wants it expressed in a certain way.
 

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