- #36
Hurkyl
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
Gold Member
- 14,983
- 28
It is difficult; it took a while before mathematicians came up with limits to allow them to rigorously deal with these things... and limits do seem awfully obtuse at first. But, the more you use them, the more sense they make.
And mathematicians like things to behave nicely too, so we define special classes of things that do behave nicely. For instance, an infinite series is "absolutely convergent" iff it's commutative and assocative. e.g.
1 + -1/2 + 1/4 + -1/8 + 1/16 + -1/32 + ...
is an absolutely convergent series becuase no matter how you rearrange and group these terms, you still get a sum of 2/3. However,
1 + -1 + 1 + -1 + 1 + -1 + ...
is not absolutely convergent, because it fails to be commutative and associative.
And it turns out that there is a simple criterion for a sequence to be in this class of functions (and this criterion is used as the definition): a series is absolutely convergent iff the series converges when you replace each term with its absolute value.
To relate this to what you said earlier, it turns out a (convergent) sequence is not absolutely convergent iff the sum of the positive terms and the sum of the negative terms are both divergent.
And mathematicians like things to behave nicely too, so we define special classes of things that do behave nicely. For instance, an infinite series is "absolutely convergent" iff it's commutative and assocative. e.g.
1 + -1/2 + 1/4 + -1/8 + 1/16 + -1/32 + ...
is an absolutely convergent series becuase no matter how you rearrange and group these terms, you still get a sum of 2/3. However,
1 + -1 + 1 + -1 + 1 + -1 + ...
is not absolutely convergent, because it fails to be commutative and associative.
And it turns out that there is a simple criterion for a sequence to be in this class of functions (and this criterion is used as the definition): a series is absolutely convergent iff the series converges when you replace each term with its absolute value.
To relate this to what you said earlier, it turns out a (convergent) sequence is not absolutely convergent iff the sum of the positive terms and the sum of the negative terms are both divergent.
Last edited: