Difference between revisions of "Conditional convergence"
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Latest revision as of 20:20, 12 December 2014
2020 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary: 40A05 [MSN][ZBL]
of a series
A property of series, stating that the given series converges after a certain (possibly trivial) rearrangement of its terms. A series of numbers is unconditionally convergent if it converges itself, as well as any series obtained by rearranging its terms, while the sum of any such series is the same; in other words: The sum of an unconditionally-convergent series does not depend on the order of its terms. If the series (*) converges, but not unconditionally, then it is said to be conditionally convergent. For the series (*) to be conditionally convergent it is necessary and sufficient that it converges and does not absolutely converge, i.e. that \sum_{n=1}^\infty |u_n| = +\infty.
If the terms of the series (*) are real numbers, if the non-negative terms are denoted by u_1^+, u_2^+,\dots and the negative terms by -u_1^-, -u_2^-,\dots then the series (*) is conditionally convergent if and only both series \sum_{n=1}^\infty u_n^+ and \sum_{n=1}^\infty u_n^- diverge (here the order of the terms in the series is immaterial).
Let the series (*) of real numbers be conditionally convergent and let -\infty\le \alpha < \beta \le +\infty, then there exists a series \sum_{n=1}^\infty u_n^*, obtained by rearranging the terms of (*), such that if \{s_n^*\} denotes its sequence of partial sums, then
\underline{\lim}_{n\to\infty}\; s_n^* = \alpha,\quad \overline{\lim}_{n\to\infty}\; s_n^* = \beta (this is a generalization of Riemann's theorem, cf. Riemann theorem 2).
The product of two conditionally-convergent series depends on the order in which the result of the term-by-term multiplication of the two series is summed.
The concepts of conditional and unconditional convergence of series may be generalized to series with terms in some normed vector space X. If X is a finite-dimensional space then, analogously to the case of series of numbers, a convergent series \sum_{n=1}^\infty u_n, u_n\in X, n=1,2,\dots is conditionally convergent if and only if the series \sum_{n=1}^\infty \|u_n\|_X is divergent. If, however, X is infinite dimensional, then there exist unconditionally-convergent series \sum_{n=1}^\infty \|u_n\|_X = +\infty.
Comments
A very useful reference on convergence and divergence of series with elements in abstract spaces is [a1].
References
[a1] | J. Lindenstrauss, L. Tzafriri, "Classical Banach spaces" , 1. Sequence spaces , Springer (1977) |
[a2] | W. Rudin, "Principles of mathematical analysis" , McGraw-Hill (1976) pp. 107–108 |
Conditional convergence. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Conditional_convergence&oldid=35594