MATH 2B Chapter Notes - Chapter 11.1: Geometric Progression, Indeterminate Form, Asparagine

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MATH 2B Full Course Notes
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MATH 2B Full Course Notes
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A sequence is an ordered list of numbers. To denote the entire sequence we use either of the notations (an) n=1 or. When it is unambiguous, we will simply write (an). In this course, all our sequences are in nite, and have an initial term. We refer to an as the nth term of the sequence. In the picture it seems clear that the values an get closer to 1, the larger n gets. A sequence (an) has limit l, and we write an = l lim n if we can force the values an to be as close as we like to l simply by choosing n to be large enough. 2. We say that (an) converges if there exists a limit, and diverges otherwise. If should be clear that, as n , we have that 1 example above, we immediately have n approaches zero.

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