twoflower
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Hi, yesterday we wrote test from calculus
1. Problem
Find out, for which y \in \mathbb{R} the sum
<br /> \sum_{n=2}^{\infty} a_{n}<br />
converges, where
<br /> a_{n} = \frac{1}{2^{n} - 2^{-n}} \frac{y^{n}}{2n - 1}<br />
and for which y this sum converges absolutely.
2. Problem
Decide, whether the limit
<br /> \lim_{n \rightarrow \infty} b_{n}<br />
exists, where
<br /> b_1 = 4,<br />
<br /> b_{n+1} = \frac{6}{1 + b_{n}} \forall n \in \mathbb{N}<br />
If the limit exists, find it.
3. Problem
Decide, whether the limit exists:
<br /> \lim_{n \rightarrow \infty} \frac{3^{n} + 2n^{n} + n!}{(n+1)^4 + \sin{n} + (3n)!}<br />
If the limit exists, find it.
-----------------------
Here's how I approached:
1. Problem
First I try interval y \in <0,2) (I just guessed it...).
I used Abel's-Dirichlet's theorem about the convergence and I proved the preconditions so that I could say the sum converges for y in this interval.
For interval y \in (-2, 0) I used Leibniz's theorem and I found out that it converges in this interval too.
In sum, we get that the sum converges for y \in (-2, 2).
For every other y the sum diverges I think.
The sum converges absolutely for y \in (-2, 2) too.
2. Problem
I was quite useless at solving this, I tried to prove the convergence using Bolzano-Cauchy criterion, but I got somewhat non-sense result (limit in \mathbb{R} doesn't exist)
3. Problem
Next problem I wasn't completely sure about. I multiplied the limit with
<br /> \frac{\frac{1}{n^{n}}}{\frac{1}{n^{n}}}<br />
and comparing the n^{n} and (3n)! (which gets larger in infinity I think) I got that the limit is 0. Is it ok?

1. Problem
Find out, for which y \in \mathbb{R} the sum
<br /> \sum_{n=2}^{\infty} a_{n}<br />
converges, where
<br /> a_{n} = \frac{1}{2^{n} - 2^{-n}} \frac{y^{n}}{2n - 1}<br />
and for which y this sum converges absolutely.
2. Problem
Decide, whether the limit
<br /> \lim_{n \rightarrow \infty} b_{n}<br />
exists, where
<br /> b_1 = 4,<br />
<br /> b_{n+1} = \frac{6}{1 + b_{n}} \forall n \in \mathbb{N}<br />
If the limit exists, find it.
3. Problem
Decide, whether the limit exists:
<br /> \lim_{n \rightarrow \infty} \frac{3^{n} + 2n^{n} + n!}{(n+1)^4 + \sin{n} + (3n)!}<br />
If the limit exists, find it.
-----------------------
Here's how I approached:
1. Problem
First I try interval y \in <0,2) (I just guessed it...).
I used Abel's-Dirichlet's theorem about the convergence and I proved the preconditions so that I could say the sum converges for y in this interval.
For interval y \in (-2, 0) I used Leibniz's theorem and I found out that it converges in this interval too.
In sum, we get that the sum converges for y \in (-2, 2).
For every other y the sum diverges I think.
The sum converges absolutely for y \in (-2, 2) too.
2. Problem
I was quite useless at solving this, I tried to prove the convergence using Bolzano-Cauchy criterion, but I got somewhat non-sense result (limit in \mathbb{R} doesn't exist)
3. Problem
Next problem I wasn't completely sure about. I multiplied the limit with
<br /> \frac{\frac{1}{n^{n}}}{\frac{1}{n^{n}}}<br />
and comparing the n^{n} and (3n)! (which gets larger in infinity I think) I got that the limit is 0. Is it ok?