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  1. How can Cyclic groups be infinite - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Oct 4, 2020 · I am a little confused about how a cyclic group can be infinite. To provide an example, look at $\\langle 1\\rangle$ under the binary operation of addition. You can never make any negative …

  2. Ramanujan's radical and how we define an infinite nested radical

    Feb 20, 2019 · The user @Eevee Trainer provided a nice explanation on how we define infinite nested radical in terms of limit of finite nested radical which should be insensitive of the starting point.

  3. linear algebra - What can be said about the dual space of an infinite ...

    The dual space of an infinite-dimensional vector space is always strictly larger than the original space, so no to both questions. This was discussed on MO but I can't find the thread.

  4. I have learned that 1/0 is infinity, why isn't it minus infinity?

    An infinite number? Kind of, because I can keep going around infinitely. However, I never actually give away that sweet. This is why people say that 1 / 0 "tends to" infinity - we can't really use infinity as a …

  5. functional analysis - What is a good textbook to learn about infinite ...

    Jan 31, 2025 · There are the following textbooks to learn about infinite-dimensional manifolds: "The Convenient Setting of Global Analysis" by Andreas Kriegl and Peter W. Michor

  6. Infinite-dimensional manifolds: Fréchet, Banach and Hilbert manifolds ...

    Jul 15, 2022 · Essentially, it is sought that these manifolds with infinite dimension are homeomorphic, as these topological spaces, to vector spaces of infinite dimension, and this gives rise to the following …

  7. e as sum of an infinite series - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Oct 28, 2014 · e as sum of an infinite series [duplicate] Ask Question Asked 11 years, 5 months ago Modified 11 years, 3 months ago

  8. Infinite Series $\\sum 1/(n(n+1))$ - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Write out a few terms of the series. You should see a pattern! But first consider the finite series: $$\sum\limits_ {n=1}^ {m}\left (\frac {1} {n}-\frac {1} {n+1 ...

  9. Can a countable set contain uncountably many infinite subsets such …

    Dec 15, 2025 · Can a countable set contain uncountably many infinite subsets such that the intersection of any two such distinct subsets is finite?

  10. Proving a result in infinite products: $\prod (1+a_n)$ converges (to a ...

    Apr 13, 2016 · Questions But from here I don't know if I am right, how to conclude and solve the converse part to say that we have a non zero limit, and another thing Can someone provide explicit …