Thursday, October 17, 2019
Unconditional and unconditional Convergence Coursework
Unconditional and unconditional Convergence - Coursework Example    Unconditional and unconditional Convergence:  Theorem: Every absolutely convergent series is unconditionally convergent.  Conditional Convergence:  A convergent series is said to be conditionally convergent if it is not unconditionally convergent. Thus such a series converges in the arrangement given, but either there is some rearrangement that diverges or else there is some rearrangement that has a different sum.  Theorem: Every nonabsolutely convergent series is conditionally convergent. In fact, every nonabsolutely convergent series has a divergent rearrangement and can also be rearranged to sum to any preassigned value.  The unordered sum of a sequence of real numbers, written as,  âËâ_iâ⠬Nââ"âai has an apparent connection with the ordered sum âËâ_(i=1)^âËžââ"âai  The answer is both have same convergence.  Theorem A necessary and sufficient condition for âËâ_iâ⠬Nââ"âai to converge is that the series âËâ_(i=1)^âËžââ"âai is absolutely convergent and in this case  âËâ_(i=1)^âËžââ"âãâ¬â"ai=âËâ_(iâËËâ⠵)ââ"âaiãâ¬â"       
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