Given a_1=1,\ a_{n+1}=a_n+\frac{1}{a_n}, find \lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{a_n}{n}

Swebaceacichegh

Swebaceacichegh

Answered question

2022-01-21

Given a1=1, an+1=an+1an, find limnann

Answer & Explanation

Jordyn Horne

Jordyn Horne

Beginner2022-01-22Added 16 answers

I completely forgot about the Stolz-Cesàro theorem, from which we get:
limnann=limnan+1an(n+1)n=limn1an1=limn1an=0
The same technique works for an2n
enguinhispi

enguinhispi

Beginner2022-01-23Added 15 answers

As an+12=an2+2+1an2, we know that
an+12an2+3
If an23n, then an+123(n+1), and since a12=13, by the induction hypothesis an23n
Thus, an2n23n for all n, and hence
limnan2n2=0
from this it follows though that
limnann=0
RizerMix

RizerMix

Expert2022-01-27Added 656 answers

Lets rewrite: an+1ann+1n=1an Now, as n goes to infinity lets denote an=f Then approximately: dfdn=1f After integrating f22=n+cf2n2=2n+cn2

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