Real Analysis

Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au

Last update: 13 July 2014

Lecture 17

Let (an) be a sequence in .

(a) Assume limn|an+1||an|=a exists and a<1. Then n=1|an| converges.
(b) Assume limn|an+1||an|=a exists and a>1. Then n=1|an| diverges.

Let (an) be a sequence in .

(a) Assume limn|an|1n=a exists and a<1. Then n=1|an| converges.
(b) Assume limn|an|1n=a exists and a>1. Then n=1|an| diverges.

Proof of theorem 1a.

Assume limn|an+1||an|=a and a<1.

Let ε>0 such that a<a+ε<1.

Let N>0 such that if n>N then ||an+1||an|-a| <ε. Then n=1 |an| = |a1|+ |a2|++ |aN|+ |aN+1|+ |aN+2|+ = |a1|+ |a2|++ |aN|+ |aN|· |aN+1||aN|+ |aN| |aN+1||aN|+ |aN+2||aN+1|+ |a1|+ |a2|++ |aN|+ |aN| ( |aN+1||aN|+ |aN+1||aN| |aN+2||aN+1|+ |aN+1||aN| |aN+2||aN+1| |aN+3||aN+2|+ ) |a1|++ |aN|+|aN| ( (a+ε)+ (a+ε)2+ (a+ε)3+ ) = |a1|++ |aN|+ |aN| (11-(a-ε)). So the ratio test is a comparison to a geometric series!

Proof of theorem 2a.

Assume limn|an|1n=a and a<1.

Let ε>0 such that a<a+ε<1.

Let N>0 such that if n>N then ||an|1n-a|<ε.

Then n=1 |an| = |a1|++ |aN|+ |aN+1|+ |aN+2|+ = |a1|++ |aN|+ (|aN+1|1N+1)N+1+ (|aN+2|1N+2)N+2+ |a1|++ |aN|+ (a+ε)N+1+ (a+ε)N+2+ = |a1|++|aN|+ (a+ε)N+1 (1+(a+ε)+(a+ε)2+) = |a1|++|aN| +(a+ε)N+1 (11-(a+ε)).

A sequence (an) is contractive if there exists α, α(0,1) such that |an+1-an| α|an-an-1| forn=2,3,4, If (an) is contractive then |an+1-an| α|an-an-1| α2|an-1-an-2| α3|an-2-an-3| αn-1 an(n-2)- an-(n-1) αn-1 |a2-a1|, which is very small if n=10000000 and α=12. This is the idea behind the proof of the ratio test.

A sequence (an) is Cauchy if (an) satisfies: If ε>0 then there exists N>0 such that if m,n>0 and m,n>N then d(am,an)<ε.

There does not exist ab such that (ab)2=2.

Proof.

Proof by contradiction.
Assume ab and a2b2=2 and ab is reduced.
Then a2=2b2, so that a2 is even.
So a is even.
So 2b2 is divisible by 4.
So b2 is even.
So b is even.
So ab is not reduced.
Contradiction.
So there does not exist ab with (ab)2=2.

Consider the sequence in : ( 1, 1410, 141100, 14141000, 1414210000, 141421100000, ) This is a Cauchy sequence that does not converge.

Consider the sequence in : ( 1.00, 1.4000,, 1.4100, 1.41400, 1.414200, ) This is a Cauchy sequence that does converge.

Notes and References

These are notes from a 2010 course on Real Analysis 620-295. This page comes from 100416Lect17.pdf and was given on 16 April 2010.

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