Mathematics Asked by LCE on December 10, 2021
Let $x_iin(0,1]$ for all $i$. Are the following true, and if so is there a easy proof or citation.
$prod_{i=1}^infty x_i = e^{sum_{i=1}^infty log x_i}$ always holds (if the sum diverges to $-infty$, the equality is $0=0$).
If $sum_{i=1}^infty |log x_i|<infty$, then $prod_{i=1}^infty x_i$ converges absolutely (in the sense that the value doesn’t change with reordering).
For 2, if that’s not true, is there some condition about absolute convergence of a series that implies absolute convergence of the infinite product.
Both are true.
Follows by letting $N to infty$ in $prod_{i=1}^{N} x_i=e^{ sumlimits_{i=1}^{N} log x_i}$
follows immediately from 1) and the fact that if series is absolutely convergent then any permutation of the terms results in a convergent series.
Answered by Kavi Rama Murthy on December 10, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Questions
Recent Answers
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP