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Abel Summability
Abel
summability is a generalized convergence criterion for power series.
It extends the usual definition of the sum
of a series, and gives a
way of summing up certain divergent series. Let us start with a
series
, convergent
or not, and use that series
to define a power series
Of course it is important to ask whether an ordinary convergent series is also Abel summable, and whether it converges to the same limit? This is true, and the result is known as Abel's limit theorem, or simply as Abel's theorem.
The standard example of a divergent series that is nonetheless Abel summable is the alternating series
asAbel's theorem is the prototype for a number of other theorems about convergence, which are collectively known in analysis as Abelian theorems. An important class of associated results are the so-called Tauberian theorems. These describe various convergence criteria, and sometimes provide partial converses for the various Abelian theorems.
The general converse to Abel's theorem is false, as the example above illustrates 1. However, in the 1890's Tauber proved the following partial converse.
Footnotes
- ... illustrates1
- We want the converse to be false; the whole idea is to describe a method of summing certain divergent series!