Unconditional convergence
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In mathematical analysis, a series in a Banach space X is unconditionally convergent if for every permutation the series converges.
This notion is often defined in an equivalent way: A series is unconditionally convergent if for every sequence , with , the series
converges.
Every absolutely convergent series is unconditionally convergent, but the converse implication does not hold in general.
When then by a famous theorem of Riemann (xn) is unconditionally convergent if and only if it is absolutely convergent.
[edit] References
- Ch. Heil: A Basis Theory Primer
- K. Knopp: "Theory and application of infinite series"
- K. Knopp: "Infinite sequences and series"
- P. Wojtaszczyk: "Banach spaces for analysts"
This article incorporates material from Uncoditional convergence on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the GFDL.