Math for Non-Geeks/Telescoping sums and series
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Telescoping series are certain series where summands cancel against each other. This makes evaluating them particularly easy.
Telescoping sums
Introductory example
Consider the sum
Of course, we can compute all the brackets and then try to evaluate the limit when summing them up. However, there is a faster way: Some elements are identical with opposite pre-sign.
Every two terms cancel against each other. So if we shift the brackets (associative law), we get
This trick massively simplified evaluating the series. It works for any number of summands:
This is called principle of telescoping sums: we make terms cancel against each other in a way that a long sum "collapses" to a short expression.
General introduction
File:Teleskopsumme – Definition und Erklärung.webm

A telescoping sum is a sum of the form . Neighbouring terms cancel, so one obtains:
analogously,
The name "telescoping sum" stems from collapsible telescopes, which can be pushed together from a long into a particularly short form.
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Definition and theorem
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Partial fraction decomposition
Unfortunately, most of the sums which can be "telescope-collapsed" do not directly have the above form, but must be brought into it. The following is an example:
The does not look like a telescoping sum: there is just one fraction. but there is a trick, which makes it a telescoping sum. For each we have:
So
And this is a telescoping sum. Who would have guessed that ?! Template:Smiley The re-formulation has a name: it is called partial fraction decomposition. A fraction with a product in the denominator is split into a sum, where each summand has only one factor in the denominator. This trick can serve in a lot of cases for turning a sum over fractions into a telescoping sum.
Telescoping series
Introductory example
What happens for infinitely many summands? Consider the series
The partial sums of this series are telescoping sums: For all , there is:
So the limit amounts to
General introduction
Telescoping series are series whose sequences of partial sums are telescoping sums. They have the form . Their partial sums have the form
To see whether a telescoping series converges, we need to investigate whether the sequence converges. This sequence in turn converges, if and only if converges. If is the limit of , then the limit of the telescoping series amounts to
If diverges, then diverges, as well and the entire telescoping series diverges. Analogously, the series converges, if we can show that converges. In that case, the limit is
Definition, theorem and example
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Examples
Example 1
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Example 2
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Example 3
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Series are sequences and vice versa
In the beginning of the chapter, we have used that a series is actually nothing else than a sequence (of partial sums) Conversely, any sequence can be made a series if we write it as a telescoping series: We can write
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So a sequence element can be written as
The sequence can hence be interpreted as a series , where the "series" is seen identical with "sequence of partial sums", here.
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