Simplifying Summations: Finding a Solution for a Tricky Problem

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Homework Help Overview

The original poster attempts to simplify a summation involving a square root and a variable, which they denote as 'i'. There is uncertainty regarding the setup of the problem and the correct interpretation of the variable involved.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants question the clarity of the summation and the role of the variable 'i', with some suggesting that the original poster clarify the problem context. There is discussion about whether squaring the entire expression is a valid approach and what implications that might have.

Discussion Status

Some participants express confusion about the original problem and the notation used. There is a suggestion that the original poster provide more details to facilitate better guidance. Various interpretations of the variable 'i' are being explored, and there is no explicit consensus on how to proceed.

Contextual Notes

There are indications that the original problem may have been misrepresented or incomplete, leading to uncertainty in the discussion. Participants are also considering the implications of squaring the expression and whether it is a valid operation in this context.

KatieLynn
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Homework Statement



I'm trying to simplify a summation. I have something that looks like

[tex] <br /> \sum \sqrt{(1/4)(i)} (1/4)[/tex]Granted I might have made a mistake setting this up which would make my question irrelevant but anyway.

Homework Equations


there are equations for i, i squared and i cubed

The Attempt at a Solution



I don't think there's an equation for the square root of i, so can i square the whole problem to make it just i?

So it would be like...[tex] <br /> \sum \((1/4)(i)(1/16)[/tex]
 
Last edited:
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What are you summing, and where is the i?
 
I typed x instead of i, i just showed one part of the problem, i just want to know if you can just square the whole thing
 
does it work if u plug in numbers?

like 1+2+3+4 = 10 .. (edit: not 5) lol

It should not work (using my guessing power)
 
Is 'i' the variable in the summand which goes from say i=0 to some i=N, or does it denote the square root of -1? I really don't get what you are summing up here. You said there's 'x', so where is it?
 
You definitely can't 'square it' in the way you are thinking about. You can approximate it pretty well if the upper limit is large. Maybe you should tell us what the actual problem is. As you said, this particular issue may be irrelevant.
 
from her comment: "there are equations for i, i squared and i cubed "

I think she wants a formula for i^0.5 ...

I don't think there's any
 
I don't think there is any either. That's why I suggested telling us the original problem. KatieLynn probably doesn't really need one.
 

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