This is an old revision of this page, as edited by TechnicallyNo(talk | contribs) at 16:01, 10 June 2021(The assumption that f is non-negative is redundant. It is not used in the proof and indeed one can easily show that if f(x) < 0 for some x ∈ [N, ∞) then both the sum and integral diverge so the statement of the theorem stays true.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.Revision as of 16:01, 10 June 2021 by TechnicallyNo(talk | contribs)(The assumption that f is non-negative is redundant. It is not used in the proof and indeed one can easily show that if f(x) < 0 for some x ∈ [N, ∞) then both the sum and integral diverge so the statement of the theorem stays true.)
The integral test applied to the harmonic series. Since the area under the curve y = 1/x for x ∈ [1, ∞) is infinite, the total area of the rectangles must be infinite as well.
is finite. In particular, if the integral diverges, then the series diverges as well.
Remark
If the improper integral is finite, then the proof also gives the lower and upper bounds
1
for the infinite series.
Proof
The proof basically uses the comparison test, comparing the term f(n) with the integral of f over the intervals
[n − 1, n) and [n, n + 1), respectively.
Since f is a monotone decreasing function, we know that
and
Hence, for every integer n ≥ N,
2
and, for every integer n ≥ N + 1,
3
By summation over all n from N to some larger integer M, we get from (2)
The above examples involving the harmonic series raise the question, whether there are monotone sequences such that f(n) decreases to 0 faster than 1/n but slower than 1/n1+ε in the sense that
for every ε > 0, and whether the corresponding series of the f(n) still diverges. Once such a sequence is found, a similar question can be asked with f(n) taking the role of 1/n, and so on. In this way it is possible to investigate the borderline between divergence and convergence of infinite series.
Using the integral test for convergence, one can show (see below) that, for every natural numberk, the series