Analysis
Series Convergence Tests
Six tools to decide if an infinite sum is finite
A series ∑ aₙ converges when its partial sums approach a finite limit. Convergence tests — integral, comparison, ratio, root, alternating, p-series — give algebraic shortcuts for deciding without computing partial sums.
- Series∑_{n=1}^∞ aₙ — limit of partial sums S_N = a₁ + ... + a_N
- Necessary conditionaₙ → 0 (else divergent)
- p-series∑ 1/nᵖ converges iff p > 1
- Geometric series∑ rⁿ converges iff |r| < 1, sum = 1/(1−r)
- Absolute convergence⇒ convergence and rearrangement-stable
- Used inTaylor expansions, Fourier series, special functions, generating functions
Watch the 60-second explainer
A condensed visual walkthrough — narrated, captioned, under a minute.
What "convergence" actually means
Given a sequence a₁, a₂, a₃, ... define the partial sums:
S_N = a₁ + a₂ + ... + a_N
The series ∑_{n=1}^∞ aₙ converges if the sequence S_N has a finite limit S; the limit is then declared the "sum" of the series. Otherwise the series diverges. There's no other definition.
The simplest necessary condition: if aₙ does not tend to zero, the series cannot converge. In symbols, ∑ aₙ converges ⇒ aₙ → 0. The converse fails — the harmonic series ∑ 1/n diverges even though 1/n → 0 — so aₙ → 0 is necessary but not sufficient. This one-way implication is the divergence test: if aₙ does not approach 0, you're done, the series diverges.
Six tests at a glance
| Test | When to use | Conclusion | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Integral test | aₙ = f(n), f positive, decreasing, continuous | ∑ aₙ and ∫₁^∞ f(x) dx converge or diverge together | Need f monotone and to evaluate the integral |
| Comparison test | 0 ≤ aₙ ≤ bₙ for known bₙ | ∑ bₙ converges ⇒ ∑ aₙ converges; ∑ aₙ diverges ⇒ ∑ bₙ diverges | Requires explicit term-by-term inequality |
| Limit comparison | aₙ > 0, bₙ > 0, lim aₙ/bₙ = c, finite, positive | Both converge or both diverge | Requires a good benchmark series bₙ |
| Ratio test | Factorials, powers like rⁿ, n^k | L = lim |a_{n+1}/aₙ|: L < 1 converges absolutely; L > 1 diverges; L = 1 inconclusive | Inconclusive at L = 1; especially weak for rational aₙ |
| Root test | Powers of n, terms like nⁿ or 2ⁿ | L = lim ⁿ√|aₙ|: L < 1 converges; L > 1 diverges; L = 1 inconclusive | Inconclusive at L = 1; sometimes harder to compute than ratio |
| Alternating series test | aₙ = (−1)ⁿ bₙ with bₙ ↘ 0 | The series converges; |error| ≤ first omitted term | Only proves convergence, not absolute convergence |
| p-series test | ∑ 1/nᵖ | Converges iff p > 1 | Specific to that exact form |
The integral test, ratio test, and root test all derive from comparison with a geometric or p-series; they're packaged shortcuts for the comparison test in their natural domains.
Integral test — calculus benchmarks
If f is positive, decreasing, and continuous on [1, ∞), and aₙ = f(n), then:
∑_{n=1}^∞ aₙ converges ⇔ ∫₁^∞ f(x) dx converges
The reason is geometric: rectangles of width 1 and height f(n) under the curve sandwich the integral. Apply this to the harmonic series:
∫₁^∞ dx/x = lim_{b→∞} [ln x]₁^b = ∞ ⇒ ∑ 1/n diverges
And to the p-series:
∫₁^∞ dx/xᵖ = lim_{b→∞} [x^(1−p)/(1−p)] = finite iff p > 1
So ∑ 1/nᵖ converges iff p > 1. This single result — the p-series test — is the benchmark every other comparison test leans on.
Comparison and limit-comparison
The plain comparison test: if 0 ≤ aₙ ≤ bₙ and ∑ bₙ converges, then ∑ aₙ converges. Conversely, if ∑ aₙ diverges then ∑ bₙ diverges. The trick is finding the right benchmark — usually a p-series.
Limit comparison softens the requirement. If aₙ, bₙ > 0 and lim aₙ/bₙ = c with 0 < c < ∞, then ∑ aₙ and ∑ bₙ share a fate. Example: study ∑ (3n + 2) / (n² + 5n + 1). For large n the term behaves like 3/n, so compare to bₙ = 1/n:
aₙ/bₙ = (3n + 2)·n / (n² + 5n + 1) → 3 as n → ∞
The limit is finite and positive. Since ∑ 1/n diverges, so does the original series.
Ratio and root tests
Both tests find the asymptotic geometric ratio of the terms. The ratio test:
L = lim_{n→∞} |a_{n+1} / aₙ|
L < 1 ⇒ ∑ aₙ converges absolutely
L > 1 ⇒ ∑ aₙ diverges
L = 1 ⇒ inconclusive
The root test:
L = lim_{n→∞} ⁿ√|aₙ|
L < 1 ⇒ converges absolutely
L > 1 ⇒ diverges
L = 1 ⇒ inconclusive
Worked example with the ratio test — the series ∑ n!/nⁿ:
a_{n+1}/aₙ = ((n+1)! / (n+1)^(n+1)) · (nⁿ / n!)
= (n+1) · nⁿ / (n+1)^(n+1)
= (n / (n+1))ⁿ
= 1 / (1 + 1/n)ⁿ → 1/e ≈ 0.368 < 1
L = 1/e < 1, so ∑ n!/nⁿ converges absolutely. The factorials win against nⁿ — surprisingly, since both grow rapidly. The ratio test is at its strongest when the terms involve factorials, exponentials, or n^k powers.
The root test handles cases the ratio test doesn't, like ∑ (n/(n+1))ⁿ². For each fixed n, ⁿ√aₙ = (n/(n+1))ⁿ → 1/e < 1, so the series converges. The ratio of consecutive terms in this series is messier; root test is cleaner.
Alternating series
An alternating series has terms with alternating signs: ∑ (−1)ⁿ bₙ where bₙ > 0. The alternating series test (Leibniz) says: if bₙ is monotonically decreasing and bₙ → 0, then ∑ (−1)ⁿ bₙ converges, and the truncation error is bounded by the first omitted term.
Apply this to ∑ (−1)ⁿ⁺¹/n = 1 − 1/2 + 1/3 − 1/4 + .... The bₙ = 1/n decreases to zero, so the series converges. Its sum is ln 2. Yet the same series with absolute values, ∑ 1/n, diverges. This is conditional convergence.
Absolute vs conditional convergence
| Absolutely convergent | Conditionally convergent | |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | ∑ |aₙ| converges | ∑ aₙ converges, ∑ |aₙ| diverges |
| Convergence guaranteed? | Yes (absolute ⇒ ordinary) | Yes |
| Sum invariant under reordering? | Yes (Riemann) | No |
| Sum stable under absolute-value swaps? | Yes | Different rearrangements give different sums |
| Example | ∑ (−1)ⁿ/n² | ∑ (−1)ⁿ⁺¹/n = ln 2 |
| Cauchy product with itself | Converges | May diverge |
Riemann's rearrangement theorem makes conditional convergence pathological: by reordering the terms of a conditionally convergent series, you can make the sum equal any real number, +∞, or −∞. Absolute convergence is the safe regime where the sum is independent of ordering — essential for power series and most working theorems.
Picking a test in practice
- Check the divergence test first. If aₙ ↛ 0, the series diverges and you're done.
- Look at the form of aₙ:
- Pure 1/nᵖ → p-series test.
- Geometric / r^n term → geometric series formula.
- Factorials or growing exponentials → ratio test.
- Exponentials with n in the base or exponent → root test.
- Rational function of n → limit comparison with a p-series.
- Alternating signs and decreasing magnitude → alternating series test (and check absolute convergence separately if needed).
- Hard, monotone, integrable form → integral test.
- If your test is inconclusive (L = 1 in ratio/root), drop down to integral or comparison.
Where convergence tests matter
- Taylor expansions. The Taylor series of e^x converges for all x; sin and cos similarly. The series for ln(1 + x) converges only for |x| ≤ 1 (and at x = 1 conditionally). Determining the radius of convergence by the ratio test is standard practice; without it you don't know where the series represents the function.
- Fourier series. The convergence of Fourier coefficients dictates whether the series converges pointwise, uniformly, or only in L² — three different statements with three different consequences for whether you can differentiate the series term-by-term. Convergence tests on the coefficients separate the cases.
- Special functions. The Riemann zeta function ζ(s) = ∑ 1/nˢ converges only for Re(s) > 1 (the p-series test for complex p). Analytic continuation extends it to other s, but the original definition lives in that half-plane. Many physics calculations of vacuum energy and partition functions are founded on this.
- Generating functions. Combinatorial generating functions ∑ aₙ xⁿ have a radius of convergence that bounds the growth of aₙ (Cauchy-Hadamard formula). Whether the radius is positive, infinite, or zero tells you whether the sequence grows polynomially, slower than any exponential, or super-exponentially.
Common mistakes
- Concluding convergence from aₙ → 0. The condition is necessary, not sufficient. The harmonic series gives the classical counterexample: 1/n → 0, yet the sum diverges.
- Misapplying the ratio test at L = 1. You cannot conclude anything in this case. ∑ 1/n and ∑ 1/n² both give L = 1, with opposite verdicts. Switch to integral test or comparison.
- Forgetting the monotonicity hypothesis in the alternating-series test. The bₙ must be eventually decreasing. ∑ (−1)ⁿ aₙ with aₙ that oscillate or even grow can fail despite being alternating.
- Rearranging conditionally convergent series. Switching the order of terms in ∑ (−1)ⁿ⁺¹/n can change the sum (Riemann's theorem). Only absolute convergence licenses rearrangement.
- Comparing ∑ aₙ with ∑ bₙ when aₙ > bₙ for divergence. The plain comparison test runs only one way — bigger-than-divergent diverges, smaller-than-convergent converges. The opposite inequalities give no information.
Frequently asked questions
What does it mean for a series to converge?
Form the partial sums S_N = a₁ + a₂ + ... + a_N. The series ∑ aₙ converges if S_N approaches a finite limit S as N → ∞; otherwise it diverges. The limit S is what people mean by the "sum" of the infinite series.
What's the difference between absolute and conditional convergence?
A series ∑ aₙ converges absolutely if ∑ |aₙ| also converges. It converges conditionally if ∑ aₙ converges but ∑ |aₙ| diverges. The classic example is ∑ (−1)ⁿ⁺¹/n: it converges to ln 2, but ∑ 1/n (the harmonic series) diverges. Absolute convergence is much stronger — it allows you to rearrange terms freely without changing the sum.
Which convergence test should I try first?
Start with the divergence test: if aₙ doesn't approach 0, the series diverges. Otherwise look at the form of aₙ. Factorials and powers — try the ratio test. Pure powers of n — try the root test. Rational functions of n — compare to a p-series. Alternating signs — alternating series test. Hard cases — integral test or limit-comparison.
Why is the harmonic series ∑ 1/n divergent?
Group its terms: 1 + 1/2 + (1/3 + 1/4) + (1/5 + 1/6 + 1/7 + 1/8) + ... Each parenthesised group sums to at least 1/2, and there are infinitely many groups. The partial sums grow without bound, like ln N. The integral test confirms this: ∫₁^∞ dx/x = ln x, which diverges.
What does it mean when the ratio test gives L = 1?
Inconclusive. Both ∑ 1/n (divergent) and ∑ 1/n² (convergent) give L = 1. When the ratio test fails, fall back to a more delicate test — usually integral, comparison, or Raabe's test for p-series-style problems.
Can a series converge if the terms don't approach zero?
No. If lim aₙ ≠ 0 then ∑ aₙ diverges — that's the divergence test. The converse is not true: aₙ → 0 does not guarantee convergence. The harmonic series is the standard counterexample (1/n → 0 yet ∑ 1/n = ∞).