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Divergent geometric series

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In mathematics, an infinite geometric series of the form

is divergent if and only if Methods for summation of divergent series are sometimes useful, and usually evaluate divergent geometric series to a sum that agrees with the formula for the convergent case

This is true of any summation method that possesses the properties of regularity, linearity, and stability.

Examples

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In increasing order of difficulty to sum:

Motivation for study

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It is useful to figure out which summation methods produce the geometric series formula for which common ratios. One application for this information is the so-called Borel-Okada principle: If a regular summation method assigns to for all in a subset of the complex plane, given certain restrictions on , then the method also gives the analytic continuation of any other function on the intersection of with the Mittag-Leffler star for .[1]

Summability by region

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Open unit disk

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Ordinary summation succeeds only for common ratios

Closed unit disk

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Larger disks

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Half-plane

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The series is Borel summable for every z with real part < 1.

Shadowed plane

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Certain moment constant methods besides Borel summation can sum the geometric series on the entire Mittag-Leffler star of the function 1/(1 − z), that is, for all z except the ray z ≥ 1.[2]

Everywhere

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Notes

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  1. ^ Korevaar p.288
  2. ^ Moroz p.21

References

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  • Korevaar, Jacob (2004). Tauberian Theory: A Century of Developments. Springer. ISBN 3-540-21058-X.
  • Moroz, Alexander (1991). "Quantum Field Theory as a Problem of Resummation". arXiv:hep-th/9206074.