How to prove ( 1 + q ) n </msup> &#x2265;<!-- ≥ --> 1 + q

Carly Cannon

Carly Cannon

Answered question

2022-07-05

How to prove ( 1 + q ) n 1 + q n for all N with q > 0
I need to prove ( 1 + q ) n 1 + q n for all n N with q > 0 , q R using mathematical induction.
Firstly, I proved the base case for n = 1 that indeed 1 + q 1 + q.
Then in the inductive step, I started with ( 1 + q ) k + 1 and came to the following form
( 1 + q ) k ( 1 + q ) ( 1 + q k ) ( 1 + q ). However I'm uncertain how to explicitly show that ( 1 + q ) k + 1 1 + q ( k + 1 ) because after the expansion I get the k q 2 term that I'm unable to get rid of.

Answer & Explanation

vrtuljakc6

vrtuljakc6

Beginner2022-07-06Added 16 answers

Step 1
You can actually do the whole same process by admitting that q > 1. The calculations could be organized a little more neatly:
( 1 + q ) k + 1 = ( 1 + q ) ( 1 + q ) k ( 1 + q ) ( 1 + k q ) = 1 + ( k + 1 ) q + k q 2 1 + ( k + 1 ) q ,
since k q 2 0.
Step 2
This completes the induction step. This result is known as the Bernoulli's inequality.

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