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1520 11.2 #3 Geometric Series
https://youtu.be/DvBMYCz9M8s
https://youtu.be/UiAUGF-eDjk
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One type of series where we can
actually come up with a formula
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for the sequence of partial sums
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is called a geometric series.
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You might remember learning
about geometric sequences
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in the previous section.
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Basically, it's the same idea except
the terms are being added together.
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Every term is being multiplied
by a common ratio, which we call r,
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and that means the formula for our generic nth term would be ‘a’,
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which was the first term,
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and then times r to the
n minus 1st power,
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so that would be the formula for
our series for each individual term.
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But the idea here is, in some cases,
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we can find a formula
for the nth partial sum,
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for the sum of the first n terms,
and based on that,
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we can determine whether
this series will converge or diverge.
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A couple of cases to get
out of the way first,
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if r is equal to 1,
what would this thing look like?
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Well, what it would look like is
just ‘a’ and then plus another ‘a’
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and then plus another ‘a’ and
continuing in that fashion forever.
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Now, if I just added up
the first n terms here,
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I would have a total of n a’s
all being added together.
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That would be n times ‘a’ [na].
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But if we take a limit as n
approaches infinity for n times ‘a’,
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that limit is going to be infinite.
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So if r is equal to 1,
this series is going to diverge.
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Hopefully, that makes sense;
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if you add up an infinite number of
terms and they're all staying the same,
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your sum is not going
to approach a value.
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Basically, the only way
this wouldn't diverge
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is if ‘a’ is equal to 0,
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and most of the time,
we're going to ignore that case
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because it's really not a very interesting
version of a geometric series.
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Next up, we're going to look
at the case: if r is not equal to 1.
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In this case, the sum of the first n terms
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would just be all of these
terms added together.
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So this is our nth term.
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But actually, we can do something
interesting algebraically here
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if directly below this,
I take r times all of the terms,
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because if I do that,
I take r times this term,
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I'm going to get ‘a’ times r.
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If I take r times this term,
I'll get ‘a’ times r squared.
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I'm going to continue in this fashion,
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and this is actually going to
be the second-to-last term
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because that's what I would get
if I took the previous term times r.
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That means, if I take this times r,
I'm going to get ‘a’ times r to the n.
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And it turns out, since both
of these sums are finite,
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(there's a set number of terms),
I can combine them together.
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But surprisingly,
I'm actually going to subtract them.
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I'm going to get Sn minus r times Sn.
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My goal here is to come up
with a formula for just Sn.
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But the interesting thing that happens is,
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if we were to subtract all of
these terms from these terms,
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almost all of the terms
are going to cancel out.
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The only ones that are going
to be left are the very first term
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and the very last term of this one.
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Since we're solving for Sn,
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it hopefully makes sense to factor
that out from this side of the equation.
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There's also a common factor of ‘a’
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that we could factor out
from this side of the equation.
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Solving for Sn, we can get this
by itself by dividing by 1 minus r.
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The reason we don't have
to worry about dividing by 0
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is because we're working
under the assumption
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that r is not equal to 1 in this case,
which gives us this formula.
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What we're looking at here
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is a formula for the sum of the first
n terms of a geometric series
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as long as our common ratio is not 1.
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What I'm interested in, though,
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is if the infinite series is
going to converge or not.
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Since we have a formula for Sn,
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now we're going to take the limit
of this as n approaches infinity
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to see what's going to happen to the sum.
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One thing you'll maybe notice here is,
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there's only one part of this
entire formula that has an n in it,
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and it's this part right here.
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This is actually something
we talked about in Section 11.1.
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This right here is only going to converge
if the absolute value of r is less than 1.
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Think about it: If this is greater than 1,
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then multiplying it
by itself multiple times
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will cause it to basically
blow up to infinity.
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And if it's less than negative 1,
the same problem is going to happen,
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except the sign will be alternating
from positive to negative.
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This is only going to converge
if the absolute value of r is less than 1.
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Any other value for r,
and this thing is going to diverge,
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except of course, 1,
which we've already ruled out.
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Basically, this sequence, which stands
for the sequence of partial sums,
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converges if the absolute
value of r is less than 1,
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and it's going to diverge if the absolute
value of r is greater than or equal to 1.
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We've already excluded this case,
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but if r was negative 1,
we would run into the same problem.
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It would still diverge.
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What does it converge to?
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Well, if the absolute
value of r is less than 1,
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then this term right here is
going to approach 0 as n grows.
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And that means,
what we're going to be left with
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is just ‘a’ in the numerator
divided by 1 minus r,
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and that winds up being
the sum of a geometric series.
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If the absolute value of r is less than 1,
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then this series (the geometric series)
is going to have a sum,
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and that sum is going to equal
‘a’ divided by 1 minus r.
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If this condition is not met,
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then the geometric series
is going to diverge.