Respuesta :
You haven't provided the series, therefore, I can only help with the concept.
For an infinite geometric series, we have two possibilities for the common ratio (r):
for r > 1, the terms in the series will keep increasing infinitely and the only possible logic summation of the series would be infinity
for r < 1, the terms will decrease, therefore, we can formulate a rule to get the sum of the infinite series
In an infinite series with r < 1, the summation can be found using the following rule:
sum = [tex] \frac{a_{1} }{1-r} [/tex]
where:
a₁ is the first term in the series
r is the common ratio
Example:
For the series:
2 , 1, 0.5 , 0.25 , ....
we have:
a₁ = 2
r = 0.5
Therefre:
sum = [tex] \frac{2}{1-0.5} = 4[/tex]
Hope this helps :)
For an infinite geometric series, we have two possibilities for the common ratio (r):
for r > 1, the terms in the series will keep increasing infinitely and the only possible logic summation of the series would be infinity
for r < 1, the terms will decrease, therefore, we can formulate a rule to get the sum of the infinite series
In an infinite series with r < 1, the summation can be found using the following rule:
sum = [tex] \frac{a_{1} }{1-r} [/tex]
where:
a₁ is the first term in the series
r is the common ratio
Example:
For the series:
2 , 1, 0.5 , 0.25 , ....
we have:
a₁ = 2
r = 0.5
Therefre:
sum = [tex] \frac{2}{1-0.5} = 4[/tex]
Hope this helps :)