Kindly asking how to prove that $F(x)=\sum_{n=1}^\infty \sin(nx)/\sinh(n\pi)$ is differentiable for all $x$ and of any order? I am really stcuk to treat this function. Please make me a right path. Thank you.
Proving the function $F(x)$ is differentiable
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calculus
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1"of any order" means 1st, 2nd, 3rd,... derivatives? – 2012-12-31
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Differentiating the series term by term leads to a reasonable guess that $F'(x)=\sum_{n=1}^\infty\frac{n\cos(nx)}{\sinh(n\pi)}.$ Notice that the $n$th term is no greater than $n/\sinh(n\pi)$, and the sum of these bounds converges. So the series converges uniformly. Now, I hope the fact that uniformly convergent series can be integrated termwise is part of your knowledge base! Use the fundamental theorem of calculus to finish up.