190k views
5 votes
I've solved most! Just need help with 9, 10, 14.

Would love if I could check my answers to 7, 11, 16 for which I got

7. Radius of Convergence = 1

11. Interval of Convergence = [1, 3)

16. Converges for abs value {x} < 1. Not sure how to put that into interval of convergence...plug the numbers back in?

I've solved most! Just need help with 9, 10, 14. Would love if I could check my answers-example-1
I've solved most! Just need help with 9, 10, 14. Would love if I could check my answers-example-1
I've solved most! Just need help with 9, 10, 14. Would love if I could check my answers-example-2
User Edisson
by
7.3k points

1 Answer

5 votes
7. Correct

- - -

9. By the ratio test, the series will converge if


\displaystyle\lim_(n\to\infty)\left|((b^(n+1)(x-a)^(n+1))/(\ln(n+1)))/((b^n(x-a)^n)/(\ln n))\right|<1

The limit reduces to


\displaystyle|b(x-a)|\lim_(n\to\infty)(\ln n)/(\ln(n+1))=b|x-a|

where
|b|=b because
b>0 is given. So the series converges when


b|x-a|<1\implies|x-a|<\frac1b

This means the radius of convergence is
\frac1b.

- - -

10. By the ratio test, the series converges if


\displaystyle\lim_(n\to\infty)\left|((x^(2(n+1)))/((n+1)(\ln(n+1))^2))/((x^(2n))/(n(\ln n)^2))\right|<1

The limit is


\displaystyle|x^2|<1\implies|x|<1

and so the radius of convergence is 1.

- - -

11. Incorrect. By the root test, the series converges for


\displaystyle\lim_(n\to\infty)\sqrt[n]((x-2)^n)/(n^n)\right=\lim_(n\to\infty)\fracx-2n=0<1

which means the series converges for all
x, and so the interval of convergence is
(-\infty,\infty).

- - -

For 14 and 16, it'll probably be too late to edit this post by the time you see this. You can try posting the remaining problems in a new question.
User Dmytro Bogatov
by
6.8k points
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