I have the following formula which appears numerically to be exactly $4n$ asymptotically.
$$\sum_{i=1}^n {n \choose i}2^i \frac{i+1}{i^{\frac{n + 1}{2}}}$$
What can one do to prove this?
I have the following formula which appears numerically to be exactly $4n$ asymptotically.
$$\sum_{i=1}^n {n \choose i}2^i \frac{i+1}{i^{\frac{n + 1}{2}}}$$
What can one do to prove this?
This might not be the most elegant proof, but it serves the purpose quite well (the inequalities used elementary, but quite weak). Let's split the sum into three parts:
All in all, apart from the first term, all the remaining ones converge to zero... and they do so pretty quickly.