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Let $a_n=\text{exp}(-\cos(n))$. I have found that lim sup $a_n=e$ and lim inf $a_n=\frac{1}{e}$. But I'm just starting out with these concepts and I'm not sure how to justify these answers without the usual "cos is bounded above by $1$, below by $-1$ and exp is increasing". Any help on how to be more rigorous here?

TShiong
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    You need to also observe that $\cos(n)$ comes arbitrarily close to $\pm1$ and infinitely often too: i.e., you need to observe that there is a subsequence $(n_k)k$ with $\lim{k\to\infty}\cos(n_k)=1$, ad likewise for $-1$ – FShrike Dec 14 '22 at 17:54
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    @FShrike's comment is correct, but let's note that it's a nontrivial step—if $2\pi$ were rational then the sequence might not come arbitrarily close to $-1$ – Greg Martin Dec 14 '22 at 18:15
  • Can you please tell us where did you cross with this problem? – NotaChoice Dec 15 '22 at 16:07
  • @FShrike any additional hint please? – NotaChoice Dec 15 '22 at 16:33
  • @GregMartin any additional hint please? – NotaChoice Dec 15 '22 at 16:34
  • @NotaChoice I have given an argument. I expect it is not the simplest – FShrike Dec 15 '22 at 19:21
  • Thank you @OliverDíaz, thanks to you I followed other links reaching to the reason in that link http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~rauch/558/Kronecker.pdf – NotaChoice Dec 15 '22 at 20:12

2 Answers2

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This is not an answer yet, as we still need to justify the last 'why' or use another approximation theorem at once. I am not entirely sure if the irrationality of $\pi$ is enough. ( Maybe we should use Weyl's distribution theorem? )

Your sequence given by $a_n= e^{-\cos(n)}$ satisfies $e^{-1}<a_n< e$ for all $n\geq1$ , so to prove that $\limsup a_n= e$ and $\liminf a_n= e^{-1}$ it suffices to prove that :

$\forall \delta>0\ , \forall N\geq 1 : \exists\ n_1, n_2\geq N$ such that $e- a_{n_1}<\delta$ and $a_{n_2}- e^{-1}<\delta \quad $ ( check why? )

To do so, let $\delta>0\ $ and $ N\in \mathbb{N} $ be arbitraries, we are looking for some $n_1\geq N$ such that $e-a_{n_1}= e-e^{-\cos(n_1)}<\delta$ , i.e. $\ e- \delta< e^{-\cos(n_1)}$ or $\ \cos(n_1)< -\ln(e-\delta)$
( here the assumption is that $\delta<< e$ otherwise it is verified obviously )

When $\delta\to 0^+$ clearly $\epsilon= -\ln(e-\delta)\to -1^+$ and we are looking for a natural number $n_1$ for which $-1\leq\cos(n_1)< \epsilon$ , so we are going to prove that $\forall \alpha>0 :\ \exists\ n_1>N $ such that $n_1\in (\pi+ 2k\pi- \alpha,\pi+ 2k\pi+\alpha)$ for some $k\in \mathbb{N}$ and we are done. ( why ? )

Toward a contradiction suppose that the above claim is false, i.e. $\exists\ \alpha_o>0 :\ \forall n>N : n\notin (\pi+ 2k\pi- \alpha_o,\pi+ 2k\pi+\alpha_o)$ for all $k\in \mathbb{N}$ , then for all $n>N\ \forall k\in \mathbb{N}:\ |n- (2k+1)\pi|\geq \alpha_o$ , that is $\ |\pi- \frac{n}{2k+1}|\geq \frac{\alpha_o}{2k+1} $

Now recall Dirichlet's approximation theorem; approximate irrational numbers by rational numbers . There are infinitely many pairs $(n,q)$ such that $|\pi- \frac{n}{q}|<\frac{1}{q^2}$ , in particular there are infinitely many such that $n>N$ (why?) and we can choose $q$ to be an odd number ( $\underline{\text{why ?}}$ ) such that $\frac{1}{q^2}< \frac{\alpha_o}{q}$ by choosing a big enough $q$ verifying $\frac{1}{q}<\alpha_o$. This contradicts the hypothesis.

A similar treatment permits to find the other natural $n_2$ for the $\liminf$ , if we can find $q$ to be even in that case!

But how can we make sure that $q$ can be found to be an odd and an even number? As far as Dirichlet's theorem allows they can all be evens or all odds !

NotaChoice
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Really, you just want to know whether or not: $$\limsup_{n\to\infty}\cos(n)=1,\,\liminf_{n\to\infty}\cos(n)=-1$$Is actually true. There are maybe more elementary ways to see this, but if you like topology (which I very much do!) there is an 'elementary' argument using some theory of topological dynamical systems.

Consider the unit circle $\Bbb T=\{z\in\Bbb C:|z|=1\}$ and fix some $\zeta\in\Bbb T$. Consider the continuous 'dynamic' $\varphi:\Bbb T\to\Bbb T,\,z\mapsto\zeta\cdot z$. The 'topological dynamical system' $(\Bbb T;\varphi)$ is a group rotation system: for such systems, surprisingly, every point is (uniformly) recurrent!

Then, the (uniform) recurrence means in particular that every neighbourhood $U$ of $1$ has $\zeta^n\in U$ for infinitely many $n$. What does that really mean? Let's consider neighbourhoods of the form: $$U_\delta=\{z\in\Bbb T:1-\Re z<\delta\}$$For $\delta>0$. If $\zeta^n\in U_\delta$, that means $\cos(2\pi\cdot n\alpha)=\Re\exp(2\pi i\cdot n\alpha)\in(1-\delta,1]$, and this occurs for infinitely many $n\in\Bbb N$.

We can consider $\alpha=\frac{1}{2\pi}\in[0,1)$. Then, the above means: for all $\delta>0$, there exists (infinitely many) $n\in\Bbb N$ such that $|1-\cos(n)|<\delta$. Since $\cos(n)<1$ for all $n$, this implies: $$\limsup_{n\to\infty}\cos(n)=1$$

Since $\alpha$ is irrational, the system is transitive. That means that, for any neighbourhood of $-1$, I can get in there from the starting position $1$. Then, considering (uniform) recurrence at the element $-1\in\Bbb T$ shows that: $$\liminf_{n\to\infty}\cos(n)=-1$$

Considering recurrence at any element $z=\exp(i\theta),\theta\in[0,2\pi)$ (along with transitivity), we find: $$\lim_{k\to\infty}\cos(n_k)=\cos(\theta)$$Along some infinite sequence $(n_k)_{k=1}^\infty$. The same shall apply to $\sin$, too. In particular, the sequence $(\cos(n))_{n=1}^\infty$ accumulates at every point in $[-1,1]$.

What I like about this is that it comes more or less for free as a corollary of some minor topological trickery. It also gives uniform recurrence, which I did not elaborate on, but all that really means is that, in the sequence $n_k$, we may take the distances $n_{k+1}-n_k$ to be bounded. Surprisingly, I don't actually need to know how to approximate $\pi$ to know this! I refer the reader to the first chapters of this book for more detail.

FShrike
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  • Clearly every point is uniformly recurrent, but why ? – NotaChoice Dec 15 '22 at 20:05
  • @NotaChoice I refer you to the book. Theorems 3.4 and 3.11, I think, are the relevant ones (I may be misremembering the numbers, but skim through the main results of chapter 3). As for why, it’s essentially because (if you imagine taking successive preimages of a neighbourhood) compactness forbids these preimages to just ‘wander’, and they necessarily cover the start point infinitely many times. It is also quite special that I am talking about a group rotation system (which ‘looks the same everywhere’) as more general systems tend not to have every point uniformly recurrent – FShrike Dec 15 '22 at 21:38
  • So as it turned out, this is specific to the circle (and its geometry, being symmetrical), and not to the fact that $\pi$ is irrational, irrationality of $\pi$ is not enough if I understood correctly? – NotaChoice Dec 16 '22 at 01:46
  • From the look of the question, it looks like undergraduate real analysis, so I am still thinking there must be a more simple argument. – NotaChoice Dec 16 '22 at 01:51
  • @NotaChoice There probably is. I only claim that this perspective is elegant, I don’t claim it is the easiest. – FShrike Dec 16 '22 at 10:42
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    @NotaChoice I wouldn’t say specific to the circle geometry since all I needed was a compact Hausdorff topological group. Obtaining $\limsup_n\cos(n)=1$ in this way is not special to $\pi$, but we need $\pi$ irrational to obtain the ‘accumulation at every point’ part – FShrike Dec 16 '22 at 10:45