trickslapper
Junior Member
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2010
- Messages
- 62
The sequence is defined as x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n+1[/sub:2bvzgdeo]=3+1/x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n[/sub:2bvzgdeo]
I cannot prove monotonicity of this sequence so i split it into two subsequences. The odd terms and the even terms. I was able to prove montone decreasing for the odd terms but i'm having serious trouble proving monotonicity (increasing) for the even terms. Here are the first 3 terms of the EVEN terms of the original sequence:
x[sub:2bvzgdeo]2[/sub:2bvzgdeo]=33/10
x[sub:2bvzgdeo]4[/sub:2bvzgdeo]=360/109
x[sub:2bvzgdeo]6[/sub:2bvzgdeo]=3927/1189
So since the previous term is always less than the next term i Assume that x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n-1[/sub:2bvzgdeo]<x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n[/sub:2bvzgdeo], Now show that x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n[/sub:2bvzgdeo]<x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n+1[/sub:2bvzgdeo]
I've tried all kind of different ways and i actually end up getting a contradiction, does anyone see a way that i can prove the monotonicity of the EVEN terms of the sequence?
thanks!
I cannot prove monotonicity of this sequence so i split it into two subsequences. The odd terms and the even terms. I was able to prove montone decreasing for the odd terms but i'm having serious trouble proving monotonicity (increasing) for the even terms. Here are the first 3 terms of the EVEN terms of the original sequence:
x[sub:2bvzgdeo]2[/sub:2bvzgdeo]=33/10
x[sub:2bvzgdeo]4[/sub:2bvzgdeo]=360/109
x[sub:2bvzgdeo]6[/sub:2bvzgdeo]=3927/1189
So since the previous term is always less than the next term i Assume that x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n-1[/sub:2bvzgdeo]<x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n[/sub:2bvzgdeo], Now show that x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n[/sub:2bvzgdeo]<x[sub:2bvzgdeo]n+1[/sub:2bvzgdeo]
I've tried all kind of different ways and i actually end up getting a contradiction, does anyone see a way that i can prove the monotonicity of the EVEN terms of the sequence?
thanks!