How do you find the fourth partial sum of Sigma 5(1/2)^i from i=1 to oo?

1 Answer
Jul 12, 2018

75/16

Explanation:

A series is an infinite sum, i.e. a sum with infinite terms.

Partial sums are approximations of the series, where you reduce it to a finite number of terms. In fact, the n^"th" partial sum is the sum of the first n terms, and the series is the limit of the partial sums as n \to \infty. You can imagine this, for example, as approaching the infinite sum by summing the first 10, 100, 1000, 100000, 1000000000,... terms.

So, the fourth partial sum is the sum of the first 4 terms. Since i starts from one, we must sum the terms corresponding to i=1,2,3,4.

First of all, let's factor the 5 out of the sum:

\sum_{i=1}^4 5 (1/2)^i = 5\sum_{i=1}^4 (1/2)^i

Now we can simply translate the notations, plugging 1,2,3,4 in place of i for each term:

5\sum_{i=1}^4 (1/2)^i = 5(1/2+1/4+1/8+1/16)5*15/16=75/16