The series converges to the natural logarithm (shifted by 1) whenever .
History
The series was discovered independently by Johannes Hudde (1656)[1] and Isaac Newton (1665) but neither published the result. Nicholas Mercator also independently discovered it, and included values of the series for small values in his 1668 treatise Logarithmotechnia; the general series was included in John Wallis's 1668 review of the book in the Philosophical Transactions.[2]
Derivation
The series can be obtained from Taylor's theorem, by inductively computing the nth derivative of at , starting with
Alternatively, one can start with the finite geometric series ()
which gives
It follows that
and by termwise integration,
If , the remainder term tends to 0 as .
This expression may be integrated iteratively k more times to yield
is the Taylor series for , where log denotes the principal branch of the complex logarithm. This series converges precisely for all complex number . In fact, as seen by the ratio test, it has radius of convergence equal to 1, therefore converges absolutely on every diskB(0, r) with radius r < 1. Moreover, it converges uniformly on every nibbled disk , with δ > 0. This follows at once from the algebraic identity:
observing that the right-hand side is uniformly convergent on the whole closed unit disk.