Questions about the powerseries $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n,dinmathbb{R},zinmathbb{C}$












-2












$begingroup$


The convergenceradius is $1$ that means if $|z|= 1$ then the convergencebehaviour depends on $d$.



I have several questions about this issue:



1.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}$ absolutely convergent for $d>1$ and $|z|=1$



2.Why is the implication true:



series absolutely divergent $Rightarrow$ series is divergent



3.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ divergent for $dleq 0$ and $|z|=1$



4.Why does the convergencebehaviour depends on $zin{ainmathbb{C}||a|=1}$ for $0<dleq 1$?



I know that if $d$ is for example $1$ then $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely for z = $-1$ and diverges for z = $1$. But the statement above says we can go with $d$ as close to 0 as we want and we will still find a $z$ with $|z|=1$ for which $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges can somebody please show me the proof for all those questions I have?



Thank you!










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Not from $n=0$.
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 12:39










  • $begingroup$
    @Did Question 1-3 were answered. Can you help me with my fourth question? $forall dinmathbb{R},0<dleq1$ there exist a $|z|=1,zneq 1$ such that $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converge conditionally
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 5 at 12:46












  • $begingroup$
    Please replace "there exists $|z|=1$, $zne1$ such that..." by "for every $|z|=1$, $zne1$, one has..." What did you try to solve this?
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 14:41










  • $begingroup$
    Note that $$sum_{ngeq1}frac{z^n}{n^d}=mathrm{Li}_{d}(z)$$ where $mathrm{Li}$ is the poly-logarithm function
    $endgroup$
    – clathratus
    Jan 7 at 19:08
















-2












$begingroup$


The convergenceradius is $1$ that means if $|z|= 1$ then the convergencebehaviour depends on $d$.



I have several questions about this issue:



1.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}$ absolutely convergent for $d>1$ and $|z|=1$



2.Why is the implication true:



series absolutely divergent $Rightarrow$ series is divergent



3.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ divergent for $dleq 0$ and $|z|=1$



4.Why does the convergencebehaviour depends on $zin{ainmathbb{C}||a|=1}$ for $0<dleq 1$?



I know that if $d$ is for example $1$ then $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely for z = $-1$ and diverges for z = $1$. But the statement above says we can go with $d$ as close to 0 as we want and we will still find a $z$ with $|z|=1$ for which $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges can somebody please show me the proof for all those questions I have?



Thank you!










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Not from $n=0$.
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 12:39










  • $begingroup$
    @Did Question 1-3 were answered. Can you help me with my fourth question? $forall dinmathbb{R},0<dleq1$ there exist a $|z|=1,zneq 1$ such that $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converge conditionally
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 5 at 12:46












  • $begingroup$
    Please replace "there exists $|z|=1$, $zne1$ such that..." by "for every $|z|=1$, $zne1$, one has..." What did you try to solve this?
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 14:41










  • $begingroup$
    Note that $$sum_{ngeq1}frac{z^n}{n^d}=mathrm{Li}_{d}(z)$$ where $mathrm{Li}$ is the poly-logarithm function
    $endgroup$
    – clathratus
    Jan 7 at 19:08














-2












-2








-2





$begingroup$


The convergenceradius is $1$ that means if $|z|= 1$ then the convergencebehaviour depends on $d$.



I have several questions about this issue:



1.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}$ absolutely convergent for $d>1$ and $|z|=1$



2.Why is the implication true:



series absolutely divergent $Rightarrow$ series is divergent



3.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ divergent for $dleq 0$ and $|z|=1$



4.Why does the convergencebehaviour depends on $zin{ainmathbb{C}||a|=1}$ for $0<dleq 1$?



I know that if $d$ is for example $1$ then $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely for z = $-1$ and diverges for z = $1$. But the statement above says we can go with $d$ as close to 0 as we want and we will still find a $z$ with $|z|=1$ for which $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges can somebody please show me the proof for all those questions I have?



Thank you!










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$




The convergenceradius is $1$ that means if $|z|= 1$ then the convergencebehaviour depends on $d$.



I have several questions about this issue:



1.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}$ absolutely convergent for $d>1$ and $|z|=1$



2.Why is the implication true:



series absolutely divergent $Rightarrow$ series is divergent



3.Why is $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ divergent for $dleq 0$ and $|z|=1$



4.Why does the convergencebehaviour depends on $zin{ainmathbb{C}||a|=1}$ for $0<dleq 1$?



I know that if $d$ is for example $1$ then $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely for z = $-1$ and diverges for z = $1$. But the statement above says we can go with $d$ as close to 0 as we want and we will still find a $z$ with $|z|=1$ for which $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges can somebody please show me the proof for all those questions I have?



Thank you!







sequences-and-series power-series






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited Jan 5 at 12:28







RM777

















asked Jan 4 at 23:30









RM777RM777

38312




38312








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Not from $n=0$.
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 12:39










  • $begingroup$
    @Did Question 1-3 were answered. Can you help me with my fourth question? $forall dinmathbb{R},0<dleq1$ there exist a $|z|=1,zneq 1$ such that $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converge conditionally
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 5 at 12:46












  • $begingroup$
    Please replace "there exists $|z|=1$, $zne1$ such that..." by "for every $|z|=1$, $zne1$, one has..." What did you try to solve this?
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 14:41










  • $begingroup$
    Note that $$sum_{ngeq1}frac{z^n}{n^d}=mathrm{Li}_{d}(z)$$ where $mathrm{Li}$ is the poly-logarithm function
    $endgroup$
    – clathratus
    Jan 7 at 19:08














  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Not from $n=0$.
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 12:39










  • $begingroup$
    @Did Question 1-3 were answered. Can you help me with my fourth question? $forall dinmathbb{R},0<dleq1$ there exist a $|z|=1,zneq 1$ such that $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converge conditionally
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 5 at 12:46












  • $begingroup$
    Please replace "there exists $|z|=1$, $zne1$ such that..." by "for every $|z|=1$, $zne1$, one has..." What did you try to solve this?
    $endgroup$
    – Did
    Jan 5 at 14:41










  • $begingroup$
    Note that $$sum_{ngeq1}frac{z^n}{n^d}=mathrm{Li}_{d}(z)$$ where $mathrm{Li}$ is the poly-logarithm function
    $endgroup$
    – clathratus
    Jan 7 at 19:08








1




1




$begingroup$
Not from $n=0$.
$endgroup$
– Did
Jan 5 at 12:39




$begingroup$
Not from $n=0$.
$endgroup$
– Did
Jan 5 at 12:39












$begingroup$
@Did Question 1-3 were answered. Can you help me with my fourth question? $forall dinmathbb{R},0<dleq1$ there exist a $|z|=1,zneq 1$ such that $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converge conditionally
$endgroup$
– RM777
Jan 5 at 12:46






$begingroup$
@Did Question 1-3 were answered. Can you help me with my fourth question? $forall dinmathbb{R},0<dleq1$ there exist a $|z|=1,zneq 1$ such that $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converge conditionally
$endgroup$
– RM777
Jan 5 at 12:46














$begingroup$
Please replace "there exists $|z|=1$, $zne1$ such that..." by "for every $|z|=1$, $zne1$, one has..." What did you try to solve this?
$endgroup$
– Did
Jan 5 at 14:41




$begingroup$
Please replace "there exists $|z|=1$, $zne1$ such that..." by "for every $|z|=1$, $zne1$, one has..." What did you try to solve this?
$endgroup$
– Did
Jan 5 at 14:41












$begingroup$
Note that $$sum_{ngeq1}frac{z^n}{n^d}=mathrm{Li}_{d}(z)$$ where $mathrm{Li}$ is the poly-logarithm function
$endgroup$
– clathratus
Jan 7 at 19:08




$begingroup$
Note that $$sum_{ngeq1}frac{z^n}{n^d}=mathrm{Li}_{d}(z)$$ where $mathrm{Li}$ is the poly-logarithm function
$endgroup$
– clathratus
Jan 7 at 19:08










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1












$begingroup$


  1. Apply integral test. (Thanks to T. Bongers for pointing out an error I made earlier).

  2. False. $sum frac {(-1)^{n}} n$ is absolutely divergent but not divergent.

  3. The general term does not tend to $0$ so the series is divergent.

  4. For $0<d<1$ the series diverges absolutely whenever $|z|=1$. [Compare with $sum frac 1 n$]. The series converges for $z=-1$ and diverges for $z=1$. For $z=-1$ use Alternating Series Test.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Ratio test fails for (1). Integral test works.
    $endgroup$
    – T. Bongers
    Jan 4 at 23:43










  • $begingroup$
    Sorry in 4 I actually wanted to say $0<dleq1$. My question was if I would take a smallpositive number in this intervall $epsilon$ how can I proof existence of a $zinmathbb{C}:|z|=1$ and $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely.
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:45












  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 You cannot. If $d$ is a small positive number the series does not converge absolutely for any $z$ with $|z|=1$.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:48












  • $begingroup$
    I am unfammiliar with the integral test, can I apply also the root criteria?
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:49










  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 No. Root test and ratio test both fail in this case.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:50












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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1












$begingroup$


  1. Apply integral test. (Thanks to T. Bongers for pointing out an error I made earlier).

  2. False. $sum frac {(-1)^{n}} n$ is absolutely divergent but not divergent.

  3. The general term does not tend to $0$ so the series is divergent.

  4. For $0<d<1$ the series diverges absolutely whenever $|z|=1$. [Compare with $sum frac 1 n$]. The series converges for $z=-1$ and diverges for $z=1$. For $z=-1$ use Alternating Series Test.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Ratio test fails for (1). Integral test works.
    $endgroup$
    – T. Bongers
    Jan 4 at 23:43










  • $begingroup$
    Sorry in 4 I actually wanted to say $0<dleq1$. My question was if I would take a smallpositive number in this intervall $epsilon$ how can I proof existence of a $zinmathbb{C}:|z|=1$ and $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely.
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:45












  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 You cannot. If $d$ is a small positive number the series does not converge absolutely for any $z$ with $|z|=1$.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:48












  • $begingroup$
    I am unfammiliar with the integral test, can I apply also the root criteria?
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:49










  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 No. Root test and ratio test both fail in this case.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:50
















1












$begingroup$


  1. Apply integral test. (Thanks to T. Bongers for pointing out an error I made earlier).

  2. False. $sum frac {(-1)^{n}} n$ is absolutely divergent but not divergent.

  3. The general term does not tend to $0$ so the series is divergent.

  4. For $0<d<1$ the series diverges absolutely whenever $|z|=1$. [Compare with $sum frac 1 n$]. The series converges for $z=-1$ and diverges for $z=1$. For $z=-1$ use Alternating Series Test.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Ratio test fails for (1). Integral test works.
    $endgroup$
    – T. Bongers
    Jan 4 at 23:43










  • $begingroup$
    Sorry in 4 I actually wanted to say $0<dleq1$. My question was if I would take a smallpositive number in this intervall $epsilon$ how can I proof existence of a $zinmathbb{C}:|z|=1$ and $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely.
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:45












  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 You cannot. If $d$ is a small positive number the series does not converge absolutely for any $z$ with $|z|=1$.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:48












  • $begingroup$
    I am unfammiliar with the integral test, can I apply also the root criteria?
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:49










  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 No. Root test and ratio test both fail in this case.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:50














1












1








1





$begingroup$


  1. Apply integral test. (Thanks to T. Bongers for pointing out an error I made earlier).

  2. False. $sum frac {(-1)^{n}} n$ is absolutely divergent but not divergent.

  3. The general term does not tend to $0$ so the series is divergent.

  4. For $0<d<1$ the series diverges absolutely whenever $|z|=1$. [Compare with $sum frac 1 n$]. The series converges for $z=-1$ and diverges for $z=1$. For $z=-1$ use Alternating Series Test.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$




  1. Apply integral test. (Thanks to T. Bongers for pointing out an error I made earlier).

  2. False. $sum frac {(-1)^{n}} n$ is absolutely divergent but not divergent.

  3. The general term does not tend to $0$ so the series is divergent.

  4. For $0<d<1$ the series diverges absolutely whenever $|z|=1$. [Compare with $sum frac 1 n$]. The series converges for $z=-1$ and diverges for $z=1$. For $z=-1$ use Alternating Series Test.







share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








edited Jan 4 at 23:56

























answered Jan 4 at 23:36









Kavi Rama MurthyKavi Rama Murthy

72.6k53170




72.6k53170












  • $begingroup$
    Ratio test fails for (1). Integral test works.
    $endgroup$
    – T. Bongers
    Jan 4 at 23:43










  • $begingroup$
    Sorry in 4 I actually wanted to say $0<dleq1$. My question was if I would take a smallpositive number in this intervall $epsilon$ how can I proof existence of a $zinmathbb{C}:|z|=1$ and $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely.
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:45












  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 You cannot. If $d$ is a small positive number the series does not converge absolutely for any $z$ with $|z|=1$.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:48












  • $begingroup$
    I am unfammiliar with the integral test, can I apply also the root criteria?
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:49










  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 No. Root test and ratio test both fail in this case.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:50


















  • $begingroup$
    Ratio test fails for (1). Integral test works.
    $endgroup$
    – T. Bongers
    Jan 4 at 23:43










  • $begingroup$
    Sorry in 4 I actually wanted to say $0<dleq1$. My question was if I would take a smallpositive number in this intervall $epsilon$ how can I proof existence of a $zinmathbb{C}:|z|=1$ and $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely.
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:45












  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 You cannot. If $d$ is a small positive number the series does not converge absolutely for any $z$ with $|z|=1$.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:48












  • $begingroup$
    I am unfammiliar with the integral test, can I apply also the root criteria?
    $endgroup$
    – RM777
    Jan 4 at 23:49










  • $begingroup$
    @RM777 No. Root test and ratio test both fail in this case.
    $endgroup$
    – Kavi Rama Murthy
    Jan 4 at 23:50
















$begingroup$
Ratio test fails for (1). Integral test works.
$endgroup$
– T. Bongers
Jan 4 at 23:43




$begingroup$
Ratio test fails for (1). Integral test works.
$endgroup$
– T. Bongers
Jan 4 at 23:43












$begingroup$
Sorry in 4 I actually wanted to say $0<dleq1$. My question was if I would take a smallpositive number in this intervall $epsilon$ how can I proof existence of a $zinmathbb{C}:|z|=1$ and $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely.
$endgroup$
– RM777
Jan 4 at 23:45






$begingroup$
Sorry in 4 I actually wanted to say $0<dleq1$. My question was if I would take a smallpositive number in this intervall $epsilon$ how can I proof existence of a $zinmathbb{C}:|z|=1$ and $sum_{n=0}^{infty}frac{1}{n^d}z^n$ converges absolutely.
$endgroup$
– RM777
Jan 4 at 23:45














$begingroup$
@RM777 You cannot. If $d$ is a small positive number the series does not converge absolutely for any $z$ with $|z|=1$.
$endgroup$
– Kavi Rama Murthy
Jan 4 at 23:48






$begingroup$
@RM777 You cannot. If $d$ is a small positive number the series does not converge absolutely for any $z$ with $|z|=1$.
$endgroup$
– Kavi Rama Murthy
Jan 4 at 23:48














$begingroup$
I am unfammiliar with the integral test, can I apply also the root criteria?
$endgroup$
– RM777
Jan 4 at 23:49




$begingroup$
I am unfammiliar with the integral test, can I apply also the root criteria?
$endgroup$
– RM777
Jan 4 at 23:49












$begingroup$
@RM777 No. Root test and ratio test both fail in this case.
$endgroup$
– Kavi Rama Murthy
Jan 4 at 23:50




$begingroup$
@RM777 No. Root test and ratio test both fail in this case.
$endgroup$
– Kavi Rama Murthy
Jan 4 at 23:50


















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