Agnew's theorem

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Agnew's theorem, proposed by American mathematician Ralph Palmer Agnew, characterizes reorderings of terms of infinite series that preserve convergence for all series.[1]

We call a permutation an Agnew permutation[a] if there exists such that any interval that starts with 1 is mapped by p to a union of at most K intervals, i.e., , where counts the number of intervals.

Agnew's theorem.   is an Agnew permutation for all converging series of real or complex terms , the series converges to the same sum.[2]

Corollary 1.   (the inverse of ) is an Agnew permutation for all diverging series of real or complex terms , the series diverges.[b]

Corollary 2.   and are Agnew permutations for all series of real or complex terms , the convergence type of the series is the same.[c][b]

Usage

Agnew's theorem is useful when the convergence of has already been established: any Agnew permutation can be used to rearrange its terms while preserving convergence to the same sum.

The Corollary 2 is useful when the convergence type of is unknown: the convergence type of is the same as that of the original series.

Examples

Notes

References

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