Help me find the radius of convergence?

madcattle
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Homework Statement


Ʃn!(x-1)n
I need to find the radius of convergence for this summation from n=0 to n=∞


The Attempt at a Solution


I started off with the ratio test:

(n!(n+1)(x-1)(x-1)n)/(n!(x-1)n) = (n+1)(x-1)

(x-1)lim(n+1)...Now at this point it looks to me like the series does not actually converge, but my book is telling me that it does. Am I looking at something the wrong way? Not actually understanding the problem?
 
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It looks like it converges only at x = 1.
 
Last edited:
Usually you do the ratio test on the part of the sum that doesn't have the factor with x, so in this case with just n!. Simplifying that gets you L = limn→∞(n+1) = ∞ and the radius of convergence is r = 1/L = 0.

The only x value where it converges is x=1.
 
There are two things I don't understand about this problem. First, when finding the nth root of a number, there should in theory be n solutions. However, the formula produces n+1 roots. Here is how. The first root is simply ##\left(r\right)^{\left(\frac{1}{n}\right)}##. Then you multiply this first root by n additional expressions given by the formula, as you go through k=0,1,...n-1. So you end up with n+1 roots, which cannot be correct. Let me illustrate what I mean. For this...

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