Sum of Power Series Homework: Show Convergence and Determine Sum

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SUMMARY

The power series ∑_{k=1}^{∞} (x^{2k+1})/(k(2k+1)) converges uniformly for |x| ≤ 1. The Weierstrass majorant principle confirms this convergence, as the series is bounded by 1/(k(2k+1)), which converges. To determine the sum of the series for |x| < 1, one should differentiate the series term by term and utilize known Taylor series. The discussion emphasizes the distinction between uniform convergence and absolute convergence.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of power series and their convergence properties
  • Familiarity with the Weierstrass majorant principle
  • Knowledge of Taylor series and differentiation techniques
  • Proficiency in applying the ratio test for series convergence
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  • Learn about the Weierstrass majorant principle in detail
  • Study the application of the ratio test for series convergence
  • Explore differentiation of power series and its implications
  • Investigate specific Taylor series and their convergence characteristics
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Mathematics students, educators, and anyone interested in series convergence, particularly in the context of power series and their applications in calculus.

flybyme
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Homework Statement



Show that the power series \sum_{k=1}^{k=\infty} \frac{x^{2k+1}}{k(2k+1)} converges uniformly when |x| \leq 1and determine the sum (at least when |x| &lt; 1).


The Attempt at a Solution



Couldn't I somehow go about and show that, as |x| \leq 1, then f = \frac{x^{2k+1}}{k(2k+1)} \leq \frac{1^{2k+1}}{k(2k+1)} = \frac{1}{k(2k+1)} = g &lt; \frac{1}{2k^2} which converges. Then by Weierstrass majorant principle f should converge. Or am I missing something? And how do I find this sum? :confused:
 
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you should use the ratio test. where ever the limit evaluated by ratio test is less than one the series converges
 

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Last edited:
It seems from the way you write your explanation you confuse the sum with the individual terms in the sum.

Anyway, missing some absolute values you have a handle on showing that terms are each bounded (in absolute value) uniformly in x as indicated.

To see what the sum is, what you get if you differentiated term by term?
You would have to manipulate factors and powers of x, but it reduces to using a Taylor series you know.
 
But if I use the ratio test, is a absolutely convergent sum also uniformly convergent?
 
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That it converges is one thing. What sum of the infinite series turns out for x as indicated is another
 
gammamcc said:
That it converges is one thing. What sum of the infinite series turns out for x as indicated is another

I'm sorry but you're speaking in riddles for me... :blushing: :rolleyes:
 
These are excerpts from the question:

flybyme said:
...and determine the sum...



...And how do I find this sum? :confused:
 
gammamcc said:
These are excerpts from the question:

Sorry, with "And how do I find this sum?" I was referring to the power series in section 1.
 
As far as I understand it I can't use the ratio test to show uniform convergence.
 
  • #10
flybyme said:
But if I use the ratio test, is a absolutely convergent sum also uniformly convergent?

flybyme said:
As far as I understand it I can't use the ratio test to show uniform convergence.

You certainly should know that if a power series converges absolutely on a set, then it converges uniformly on that set. See\
http://math.furman.edu/~dcs/courses/math39/lectures/lecture-39.pdf


gammamc said:
That it converges is one thing. What sum of the infinite series turns out for x as indicated is another
He was just pointing out that you have two questions- where the series converges uniformly and what the sum is. It might help to remember that any power series is the Taylor's series for the function it converges to.

Here's what I would do. First calculate a few terms to see what is happening:
\frac{x^3}{3}+ \frac{x^5}{10}+ \frac{x^7}{21}+ \frac{x^9}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{x^{2k+1}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot
Factor out x3:
= x^3\left(\frac{1}{3}+ \frac{x^2}{10}+ \frac{x^4}{21}+ \frac{x^6}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{x^{2(k-1)}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot\right)
Write that as powers of x2:
= x^3\left(\frac{1}{3}+ \frac{x^2}{10}+ \frac{(x^2)^2}{21}+ \frac{(x^2)^3}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{(x^2)^{k-1}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot\right)

Can you think of a function that has Taylor's series
\frac{1}{3}+ \frac{x}{10}+ \frac{x^2}{21}+ \frac{x^3}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{x^{k-1}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot?
 
  • #11
HallsofIvy said:
He was just pointing out that you have two questions- where the series converges uniformly and what the sum is. It might help to remember that any power series is the Taylor's series for the function it converges to.

Ah... I totally missed that I had written "sum" instead of "series" in post #4. Guess this scheme of mine, trying to work full days and then brushing up on my math during the nights isn't going to well. I'm just too tired most of the time. My apologies.

Here's what I would do. First calculate a few terms to see what is happening:
\frac{x^3}{3}+ \frac{x^5}{10}+ \frac{x^7}{21}+ \frac{x^9}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{x^{2k+1}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot
Factor out x3:
= x^3\left(\frac{1}{3}+ \frac{x^2}{10}+ \frac{x^4}{21}+ \frac{x^6}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{x^{2(k-1)}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot\right)
Write that as powers of x2:
= x^3\left(\frac{1}{3}+ \frac{x^2}{10}+ \frac{(x^2)^2}{21}+ \frac{(x^2)^3}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{(x^2)^{k-1}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot\right)

Can you think of a function that has Taylor's series
\frac{1}{3}+ \frac{x}{10}+ \frac{x^2}{21}+ \frac{x^3}{36}+\cdot\cdot\cdot + \frac{x^{k-1}}{k(2k+1)}+ \cdot\cdot\cdot?

Not really...
 
  • #12
As in my previous installment, if you differentiated term by term (maybe more that once, if needed), you would arrive at a more familiar series. Then work backwards (integrate) so you get an explicit formula.
 
  • #13
heh, you want to try to find some close form for the original series? just differentiate with respect to x! (it is quite obvious! come on!)
 

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