BMAD Posted November 16, 2018 Report Share Posted November 16, 2018 Find the Limit as n goes to infinity for: (1^n + 2^n + 3^n + 4^n....+ n^n) ---------------------over--------------------- (n^1+ n^2 + n^3 + n^4 ... + n^n) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 EventHorizon Posted November 16, 2018 Report Share Posted November 16, 2018 Spoiler e/(e-1) That is an interesting limit :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 BMAD Posted November 17, 2018 Author Report Share Posted November 17, 2018 On 11/16/2018 at 6:48 AM, EventHorizon said: Hide contents e/(e-1) That is an interesting limit :-) Hmmmm, my answer was the reciprocal of yours. Maybe I am wrong. Can you support your answer? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 EventHorizon Posted November 18, 2018 Report Share Posted November 18, 2018 18 hours ago, BMAD said: Hmmmm, my answer was the reciprocal of yours. Maybe I am wrong. Can you support your answer? A quick check: Spoiler The second biggest term in the denominator is n^(n-1). (n^(n-1))/ (n^n) = 1/n, so as n approaches infinity the second biggest term in the denominator is negligible compared to the biggest. So are all the other terms in the denominator. Since the biggest term in the denominator is the same as the one in the numerator (and since there are no negative terms in either), the limit won't end up being less than 1. The whole #!: Spoiler As shown above, the only term that matters in the denominator is n^n. Dividing all terms in the numerator by this makes it a sum of values that look like ((n-1)^n)/(n^n) = ((n-1)/n)^n. Replacing the 1 with -a yields ((n+a)^n)/(n^n) = ((n+a)/n)^n = (1+a/n)^n. Now, take the limit of this as n approaches infinity... y = lim (1+a/n)^n ln y = lim (n * ln(1+a/n)) ln y = lim (ln(1+a/n) / n^-1 ) As n approaches infinity, top and bottom approach 0... L'Hopitals! ln y = lim (1/ (1+a/n)) * (-a/n^2) / (-n^-2) ln y = lim (1/ (1+a/n)) * a ln y = (1/(1+0)) * a ln y = a y = e^a So ((n+a)^n) / n^n approaches e^a in the limit. Listing the terms in the numerator in decreasing size is n^n + (n-1)^n + (n-2)^n + ... Dividing by the only term in the denominator that matters gives 1 + ((n-1)^n)/n^n + ((n-2)^n)/n^n + ... Using the limit we found and substituting the values in for a gives 1 + e^-1 + e^-2 + ... A geometric series with ratio 1/e. The sum of this is then 1/(1-(1/e)) = 1/((e-1)/e) = e/(e-1). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Question
BMAD
Find the Limit as n goes to infinity for:
(1^n + 2^n + 3^n + 4^n....+ n^n)
---------------------over---------------------
(n^1+ n^2 + n^3 + n^4 ... + n^n)
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