Simple Math: Simplifying (1-1/n) Sequences

  • Thread starter Thread starter DivineNathicana
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around simplifying the product of the sequence (1-1/2)(1-1/3)(1-1/4)...(1-1/n). Participants explore the pattern emerging from the fractions, leading to the conclusion that the product can be expressed as (n-1)/n. There is some confusion regarding the application of factorials, but it is clarified that the intermediate factors cancel out, simplifying the expression. The key takeaway is that as n approaches infinity, the expression converges to 1. Overall, the conversation highlights the mathematical properties involved in simplifying the sequence.
DivineNathicana
Messages
57
Reaction score
0
Greetings. Alright, if anyone's bored enough to be on-line right now, what is the following simplified and how do you get it?

(1-1/2)(1-1/3)(1-1/4)(1-1/5)...(1-1/n)

Thanks for any help,

- Alisa
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Add the fractions inside each set of parentheses and see if there is a pattern! :-)
 
I got infinity(1-2/n+2), where n= the denominator of the first of the two fractions being multiplied. That doesn't sound too solid...
 
\left(1 - \frac {1}{2}\right) \left(1 - \frac {1}{3}\right) \left(1 - \frac {1}{4}\right) \cdot \cdot \cdot \left(1 - \frac {1}{n}\right) = \frac {1}{2} \cdot \frac {2}{3} \cdot \frac {3}{4} \cdot \cdot \cdot \frac {n-1}{n}

Do you see a pattern yet?
 
I see the pattern, but I still keep on getting weird-looking answers such as

∞!
---------
((∞-1)!+1)

The (----) being a division sign. If the symbol doesn't come out, it's supposed to be infinity.
 
Well, first off, your original post said nothing about extending it to infinity. But since that seems to be where you are headed consider that

\frac {n-1}{n} = 1 - \frac {1}{n}

Now let n go to infinity! :-)
 
Wait up, it's 2 A.M., and I can't think very straight. Why does (n-1)/n=1-(1/n)? And shouldn't we be doing factorials like ((n-1)!)/n! or something like that since all of this has to be multiplied?
 
DivineNathicana said:
Wait up, it's 2 A.M., and I can't think very straight. Why does (n-1)/n=1-(1/n)? And shouldn't we be doing factorials like ((n-1)!)/n! or something like that since all of this has to be multiplied?

Um ... it's a fundamental property of numbers? The distributive property.

You can certainly use factorials but why would you want to when all the intermediate factors cancel out?
 
Ooh sorry haha I didn't realize what you were talking about. Okay, yeah, so (n-1)/n= 1-(1/n), I see that. So then wouldn't it be just 1/n if we consider all the factoring out?
 
  • #10
Exactly! I knew you'd see it sooner or later. :-)
 
  • #11
Haha thank you! Maybe next time I should try to get started a bit earlier...
 
Back
Top