151k views
1 vote
AP Calculus help #5 convergence intervals

AP Calculus help #5 convergence intervals-example-1
User Chrisbtoo
by
8.4k points

1 Answer

3 votes

The given series is geometric, so it converges if


\left|\frac2{x^2+1}\right| < 1

For all real
x, the denominator is always positive, so


\left|\frac2{x^2+1}\right| = \frac2{x^2+1} < 1 \\\\ \implies \frac{x^2+1}2 > 1 \\\\ \implies x^2+1 > 2 \\\\ \implies x^2 > 1 \\\\ \implies x>1 \text{ or } x < -1

When
x=\pm1, the series diverges:


\displaystyle \sum_(n=1)^\infty \left(\frac2{(\pm1)^2+1}\right)^n = \sum_(n=1)^\infty 1 \to \infty

so (D) is the correct answer.

User Andrew Naumovich
by
8.2k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories