Harmonic Series
Definition of the Harmonic Series
A harmonic series is a specific type of infinite series where each term is the reciprocal of a positive integer. The harmonic series is given by:
Each term
Example:
The sum of the first few terms of the harmonic series is:
Even though the terms get smaller, the sum keeps increasing as more terms are added.
Divergence of the Harmonic Series
Despite the fact that the terms of the harmonic series get smaller and smaller, the harmonic series diverges. This means that as you keep adding more and more terms, the sum grows without bound.
Proof of Divergence:
One way to show that the harmonic series diverges is by grouping terms and comparing them to a series that grows without bound.
Consider:
Group the terms as follows:
- The first group has 1 term:
. - The second group has 1 term:
. - The third group has 2 terms:
, and each term is greater than or equal to . - The fourth group has 4 terms:
, and each term is greater than or equal to .
For each group of terms, the total contribution is greater than or equal to
Thus, we conclude:
Comparison with -Series
The harmonic series is a special case of the
Where
Convergence and Divergence of -Series:
- The
-series converges if . - The
-series diverges if .
The harmonic series is the case when
Comparison Example:
- For
, we have the convergent series:
This series converges to a finite value, specifically
- For
, we have the divergent series:
This series diverges because