Files
public-notes/A Fun Harmonic Series Problem.md
2025-12-25 21:13:43 -08:00

29 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters
This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
#Math #Calculus
# The Problem
If $f(x) = \sum _{k \geq 0} a_k x^k$, and this series converges for $x = x_0$, prove:
$$
\sum _{k \geq 0} a_k x_0^k H_k = \int _0^1 \frac {f(x_0) - f(x_0 y)} {1 - y} dy
$$
where $H_k$ is defined to be the partial sums of the harmonic series ($H_0 = 0$, $H_k = \sum _{i = 1}^k \frac 1 i$ for $k \geq 1$).
(from *The Art of Computer Programming*)
# Solution
Although this problem might seem intimidating with a power series involving the harmonic numbers on the LHS and a summation function inside an integral on the RHS, it is fairly trivial to bring out the summation and express the RHS as a power series:
$$
\int _0^1 \frac {f(x_0) - f(x_0 y)} {1 - y} dy \\
= \int _0^1 \frac {\sum _{k \geq 0} a_k x_0^k - \sum _{k \geq 0} a_k x_0^k y^k} {1 - y} dy \\
= \sum _{k \geq 1} a_k x_0^k \int _0^1 \frac {1 - y^k} {1 - y} dy
$$
The integral factor on the last step is now merely Eulers integral representation for the harmonic numbers, which is easily proven by the simple fact that $\frac {1 - y^k} {1 - y} = \sum _{i = 0}^{k - 1} y^i$. Therefore:
$$
\sum _{k \geq 0} a_k x_0^k H_k = \int _0^1 \frac {f(x_0) - f(x_0 y)} {1 - y} dy
$$