Taking the harmonic series..................it begins with 1...........the only non fraction.............1 can be seen as 1/1............one divided by one is still one...........but using the zero dimension..........and combining the numerator with the denominator............u get 11..................two split in........two ones.........1 + 1 = 2................................a right triangle with two sides of 1.......................has a hyp of the square root of 2.....................1 side 1, the other side one.....................like 11..............
Divergence[edit]
There are several well-known proofs of the divergence of the harmonic series. A few of them are given below.
Comparison test[edit]
One way to prove divergence is to compare the harmonic series with another divergent series, where each denominator is replaced with the next-largest
power of two:
Each term of the harmonic series is greater than or equal to the corresponding term of the second series, and therefore the sum of the harmonic series must be greater than the sum of the second series. However, the sum of the second series is infinite:
It follows (by the
comparison test) that the sum of the harmonic series must be infinite as well. More precisely, the comparison above proves that
for every
positive integer k.
This proof, proposed by
Nicole Oresme in around 1350, is considered by many in the mathematical community to be a high point of
medieval mathematics. It is still a standard proof taught in mathematics classes today.
Cauchy's condensation test is a generalization of this argument
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