Monday, November 20, 2017

calculus - Evaluating limlimitsntoinftyensumlimitsnk=0fracnkk!


I'm supposed to calculate:


limnennk=0nkk!


By using W|A, i may guess that the limit is 12 that is a pretty interesting and nice result. I wonder in which ways we may approach it.



Answer



Edited. I justified the application of the dominated convergence theorem.


By a simple calculation,


ennk=0nkk!=enn!nk=0(nk)nk(nk)!(1)=enn!nk=0(nk)nk0tnketdt=enn!0(n+t)netdt(2)=1n!ntnetdt=11n!n0tnetdt(3)=1n(n/e)nn!n0(1un)nenudu.


We remark that


  1. In (1), we utilized the famous formula n!=0tnetdt.

  2. In (2), the substitution t+nt is used.

  3. In (3), the substitution t=nnu is used.

Then in view of the Stirling's formula, it suffices to show that


n0(1un)nenudunπ2.



The idea is to introduce the function


gn(u)=(1un)nenu1(0,n)(u)


and apply pointwise limit to the integrand as n. This is justified once we find a dominating function for the sequence (gn). But notice that if 0<u<n, then


loggn(u)=nlog(1un)+nu=u22u33nu44nu22.


From this we have gn(u)eu2/2 for all n and gn(u)eu2/2 as n. Therefore by dominated convergence theorem and Gaussian integral,


n0(1un)nenudu=0gn(u)dun0eu2/2du=π2.


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