Geometric series are series of the form
. They are important within several proofs in real analysis. In particular, they are crucial for proving convergence or divergence of other series. We will derive some criteria using them, e.g. the ratio or the root criterion.
We recall the geometric sum formula for partial sums of the geometric series. The proof of the sum formula reads as follows:
Proof (Geometrische Summenformel)
We have
Geometric series
We consider two cases:
and
.
Case 
We consider the geometric series
for any
, which especially means
. The sum formula above applies to the partial sums in that case:
So the geometric series converges if and only if the sequence of partial sums
converges. This is the case if and only if
converges. We know that
converges to
if and only if
and it converges to
, if and only if
. In this section, we only care about the first case of convergence:
Now, let us determine its limit:
Math for Non-Geeks: Template:Aufgabe
Case 
For
, we have for all
, that
. Therefore, the sequence
cannot converge to 0. So teh series
must diverge (this argument is called term test and will be considered in detail, later)
The divergence becomes particularly obvious, if
is positive, e.g. for
.
In this case, for all
, we have
and may estimate the partial sums:
So the sequence of partial sums is bounded from below by the sequence
, which in turn diverges to
. So the series
must diverge, as well.
Conclusion
We have learned: for
,
and
, the geometric series diverges. These three cases can be concluded into one case
. However, if
, then the geometric series converges to
:
Theorem (geometric series)
The geometric series
converges if and only if
. In that case, the limit is
, or written in shorthand notation:
Example (geometric series)
For
,
and
there is
Example problems
Problem 1
Solution (problems: geometric series)
Solution sub-exercise 1:
Solution sub-exercise 2:
Solution sub-exercise 3:
Solution sub-exercise 5:
This series starts with
. We perform an index shift to get it starting with
:
Problem 2
Solution (geometric series with special
)
Solution sub-exercise 1:
and
Solution sub-exercise 2:
and
Solution sub-exercise 3:
and
Problem 3
Solution (index shifting)
Solution sub-exercise 1:
Solution sub-exercise 2:
Solution sub-exercise 3:
For
and
there is
Problem 4
Solution (Sequences which relate to the geometric series)
Solution sub-exercise 1:
For all
and
we have to establish
the left-hand side is re-arranged as follows:
Solution sub-exercise 3:
We re-use the solution to sub-exercise 2 with
:
The second limit also follows from
, using an index shift:
Solution (Alternative proof to sub-exercise 3)
We may also add and subtract a 1:
Hint
Analogously to sub-exercise 3, one may show for every
that:
just replace
by