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| Question 549775:  Let k > 0 be a constant and consider the important sequence {kn}.   It’s behaviour as  n tends to infinity  will depend on the value of k.
 (i)    State the behaviour of the sequence as  n tends to infinity when k = 1 and when k = 0.
 (ii)   Prove that  if k > 1 then kn tends to infinity  as  n teds to infinity
 (hint: let k = 1 + t where t > 0 and use the fact that (1 + t)n > 1 + nt.
 (iii)	 Prove that  if 0 < k < 1 then kn tends to 0  as  n tends to infinity .
 
 Answer by richard1234(7193)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Is your sequence kn or k^n? You typed kn, which is interpreted as "k times n" but in question iii) but you implied that the limit as n goes to infinity of kn/k^n (where 0 < k < 1) is zero. 
 Either way, you can use limits or any other technique. If you mean k^n, part i) is simple, because 1^n is always 1 and 0^n is always 0.
 
 For part ii), we can actually prove it by assuming that on the other hand k^n converges to some number X. If this is so, then k(k^n) must also converge (to kX). However, k(k^n) is equivalent to k^n (since we are evaluating where n approaches infinity) so kX = X. This implies X = 0 (since k is not 1), contradiction. Hence k^n diverges.
 
 For part iii), assume on the other hand it diverges. We have |k(k^n)| < |k^n| (since |k| < 1). This is also a contradiction because we assumed it diverges, so it converges. By the same argument in ii), it converges to 0.
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