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Prove that the sequence $\sqrt{2} , \sqrt{2\sqrt{2}}, \sqrt{2\sqrt{2\sqrt{2}}} \ $ converges to $2$.

My attempt

I proved that the sequence is increasing and bounded by $2$, can anyone help me show that the sequence converges to $2$? Thanks for your help.

  • 0
    @Rahul Just wanted to point that out :P (as a side note I voted to reopen the other two questions so they can be correctly closed as dupes)2017-05-28

7 Answers 7

7

You can also observe that

$\sqrt{2\sqrt{2\sqrt{2 ...\sqrt{2}}}} \cdot \sqrt{\sqrt{\sqrt{...\sqrt{2}}}}=2$

thus

$\sqrt{2\sqrt{2\sqrt{2 ...\sqrt{2}}}} =\frac{2}{\sqrt[2^n]{2}}$

191

We have

$\sqrt{2}=2^{\frac{1}{2}}.$ Exciting, no? We also have $\sqrt{2\sqrt{2}}=2^{\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{4}},$ and $\sqrt{2\sqrt{2\sqrt{2}}}=2^{\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{4}+\frac{1}{8}}.$ For the next term, we take the previous term, multiply by $2$, getting exponent of $2$ equal to $1+\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{4}+\frac{1}{8}$, then take the square root, getting exponent of $2$ equal to $\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{4}+\frac{1}{8}+\frac{1}{16}$. The pattern continues, since the "next term" is always obtained by the same process.

It is well-known that the series $\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{4}+\frac{1}{8}+\frac{1}{16}+\cdots$ converges to $1$. Since the function $f(x)=2^x$ is continuous, our original sequence converges to $2^1$.

  • 2
    Awesome. A no-nonsense, soul-satisfying kind of answer. Love it.2016-05-12
64

Put

$a_n:=\underbrace{\sqrt{2\sqrt{2...\sqrt 2}}}_{n\text{ square roots}}\Longrightarrow a_n=\sqrt{2a_{n-1}}$

Since you've already proved the sequence $\,\{a_n\}\,$ converges, assume its limit is $\,x\,$ , so

$x=\lim_{n\to\infty}a_n=\lim\sqrt{2a_{n-1}}=\sqrt{2x}\Longrightarrow x^2=2x$

and since it's trivial that $\,x\neq 0\,$ then you can cancel above and get what you want.

34

Another prove:

Notice that: $a_1 = 2^{1/2},\ a_2 = 2^{3/4},\ a_3 = 2^{7/8}$, and so on, thus, $a_n = 2^{(2^n-1)/2^n} = 2^{1-1/2^n}$

Taking limit as $n$ tends to infinity, we have that $\lim_{n \rightarrow \infty} a_n = 2^1 = 2$

19

Hint : let $y = \sqrt{2.{y}}$ , Now solve for y.

  • 0
    You'll also need to prove that x isn't 0 for this approach to work.2016-07-13
11

Consider the following discrete-time dynamical system (or "infinite state machine", if you prefer)

$x_{k+1} = \displaystyle\sqrt{2 x_k}$

where $x_0 = \sqrt{2}$ is the initial condition. Let us introduce function $f (x) := \sqrt{2 x}$ so that the state-transition equation can be written in the form $x_{k+1} = f (x_k)$. You want to prove that

$x_{\infty} := \displaystyle\lim_{k \rightarrow \infty} x_k = 2$

Does $x_k$ converge to $2$? Here's a short numerical experiment in Haskell (using GHCi):

*Main> let f x = sqrt (2 * x) *Main> let x0 = sqrt (2) *Main> let xs = iterate f x0 *Main> take 10 xs [1.4142135623730951,1.6817928305074292,1.8340080864093424,1.9152065613971472,1.9571441241754002,1.978456026387951,1.9891988469672663,1.9945921121709402,1.9972942257819404,1.9986466550053015] 

Looks like $x_k$ does indeed converge to $2$. Let's now try to prove it. I introduce a new symbol

$\tilde{x}_{k} := \ln (x_k)$

which allows us to rewrite the state-transition equation $x_{k+1} = \displaystyle\sqrt{2 x_k}$ in the following form

$\tilde{x}_{k+1} = \frac{1}{2} \tilde{x}_k + \ln(\sqrt{2})$

which is a scalar linear dynamical system of the form $s_{k+1} = a s_k + b$, whose general solution is

$s_ k = a^k s_0 + \displaystyle\sum_{i=0}^{k-1} a^i b$

Therefore, we obtain the following general solution

$\tilde{x}_k = \left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^k \tilde{x}_0 + \displaystyle\sum_{i=0}^{k-1} \left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^i \ln(\sqrt{2})$

and, taking the limit

$\tilde{x}_{\infty} := \displaystyle\lim_{k \rightarrow \infty} \tilde{x}_k = \displaystyle\lim_{k \rightarrow \infty} \sum_{i=0}^{k-1} \left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^i \ln(\sqrt{2}) = \left[\sum_{i=0}^{\infty} \left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^i\right] \ln(\sqrt{2}) = 2 \ln (\sqrt{2}) = \ln (2)$

and, finally, we conclude that $x_{\infty} = \exp(\tilde{x}_{\infty}) = 2$.

9

Let us denote your sequence by $x_n$. Then $ x_1=\sqrt{2},\ x_{n+1}=\sqrt{2x_n} \quad \forall\ n \ge 1. $ Clearly $\sqrt{2}\le x_n<2$ for every $n \ge 1$, and $ x_n-x_{n+1}=x_n-\sqrt{2x_n}=\frac{x_n^2-2x_n}{x_n+x_{n+1}}=\frac{x_n(x_n-2)}{x_n+x_{n+1}}<0 \quad \forall n \ge 1. $ Hence $(x_n)$ is increasing and bounded above. It follows that $(x_n)$ is convergent. If $l$ denotes its limit, then $\sqrt{2}\le l \le 2$ and $l=\sqrt{2l}$. Solving the equation $l=\sqrt{2l}$ we get $l\in \{0,2\}$, and since $\sqrt{2} \le l \le 2$, we deduce that $l=2$.