Prove that $\sqrt[8]5 > \sqrt[9]6 > \sqrt[10]7 > \cdots$
My friend came up with this and gave this to me as a challenge and I'm totally stuck.
I have tried proving this by induction $\root{n+3}\of{n} > \root{n+4} \of {n+1} $ for all integers $n \geq 5$ with no luck. I don't even know how to prove the base case without a calculator. Also, it turns out that this is not true for $n \leq 4$. Why would this inequality only true from $5$ onwards?
Let $f(x)=\frac {1}{x+3}\ln x .$ Then $f'(x)=\frac {x+3-x\ln x}{x(x+3)}.$
Let $g(x)=x+3-x\ln x.$ Then $g'(x)=-\ln x.$ Now $g(x)$ is strictly decreasing for $x\geq 5$ because $g'(x)<0$ for $x\geq 5.$ By calculation $g(5)<0.$ So $g(x)\leq g(5)<0$ for $x\geq 5.$
Therefore $f'(x)=\frac {g(x)}{x(x+3)}<0$ for $x\geq 5,$ so $f(x)$ is strictly decreasing for $x\geq 5.$ So $e^{f(x)}=x^{1/(x+3)}$ is strictly decreasing for $x\ge 5.$
Remark: $g(x)$ is strictly decreasing for $x\geq 1$ but for small $x>1$ we have $g(x)>0$. E.g. $g(4)>0$. And $5$ is the least $n\in \Bbb N$ such that $g(n)<0$, i.e. such that $f'(n)<0.$
Remark. $g(5)<0\iff e^8<5^5.$ We have $e<2.72\implies e^2<7.3984<7.4\implies$ $\implies e^4<7.4^2=54.76<55\implies$ $e^8<55^2=3025<3125=5^5.$