Revision as of 13:07, 9 January 2010 by imported>Peter Schmitt
A geometric series is a series associated with an infinite geometric sequence,
i.e., the quotient q of two consecutive terms is the same for each pair.
A geometric series converges if and only if −1<q<1.
A geometric series consisting of n terms is,

where a and x are real numbers.
It can be shown that

The infinite geometric series
converges when |x| < 1, because in that case xk tends to zero for
and hence

The geometric series diverges for |x| ≥ 1.