Absolute convergence of the series sum_(n=1)^infty (-1)^n ln(cos(1/n))

Jonas Huff

Jonas Huff

Answered question

2022-11-09

Absolute convergence of the series n = 1 ( 1 ) n ln ( cos ( 1 n ) )

Answer & Explanation

zastenjkcy

zastenjkcy

Beginner2022-11-10Added 14 answers

Just use an asymptotic expansion:
ln ( cos ( 1 / n ) ) = ln ( 1 1 / 2 n 2 + o ( 1 / n 2 ) ) 1 2 n 2
By the way, for 0 < x < π 2 , we have
d d x ln ( cos ( x ) ) = sin x cos x < 0
so that ln ( cos ( 1 / n ) ) is decreasingly converging to 0. Hence, the alternating series test does apply.
Celeste Barajas

Celeste Barajas

Beginner2022-11-11Added 3 answers

As the other answerer mentioned, ln ( cos ( x ) ) x 2 2 . This can stated formally and proved using L'hopital's rule:
lim x 0 ln ( cos ( x ) ) x 2 = lim x 0 ( ln ( cos ( x ) ) ) ( x 2 )
= lim x 0 sin ( x ) 2 x cos ( x )
= lim x 0 sin ( x ) x × lim x 0 1 2 cos ( x )
= 1 2
As a result,
lim n | log cos ( 1 n ) | 1 n 2 = 1 2
So the series converges absolutely by the limit comparison test, since we know n = 1 1 n 2 converges.

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