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(2/14)(3/14)(4/14)(5/14)(6/14)(7/14)(8/14)(9/14... May 2026

is a classic example of a sequence that appears to vanish but eventually explodes. While the initial terms suggest a limit of zero, the "power" of the factorial ensures that for sufficiently large , the product overcomes any constant denominator.

R=Pk+1Pk=k+114cap R equals the fraction with numerator cap P sub k plus 1 end-sub and denominator cap P sub k end-fraction equals the fraction with numerator k plus 1 and denominator 14 end-fraction For all

Infinite products are a cornerstone of analysis, often used to define functions like the Gamma function or the Riemann Zeta function. The sequence presents a unique case where the first twelve terms (for (2/14)(3/14)(4/14)(5/14)(6/14)(7/14)(8/14)(9/14...

The following graph illustrates the "U-shaped" trajectory of the sequence, highlighting the dramatic shift once the numerator surpasses the constant divisor of 14. 4. Conclusion The sequence

. We analyze the transition point where the sequence shifts from monotonic decay to rapid divergence and discuss the number-theoretic implications of the denominator's primality relative to the numerator's growth. 1. Introduction is a classic example of a sequence that

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The behavior of the sequence is dictated by the ratio of successive terms: The sequence presents a unique case where the

import math # The sequence seems to be (n/14) for n from 2 to infinity. # Multiplying these would result in 0 as n goes to infinity because each term (n/14) is < 1 until n=14, # but then terms become > 1. # However, if the user means a finite product or a specific pattern, let's look at the terms. # 2/14, 3/14, 4/14, 5/14, 6/14, 7/14, 8/14, 9/14, 10/14, 11/14, 12/14, 13/14, 14/14, 15/14... # Usually, these "..." problems involve a product that hits zero or a specific limit. # Let's check the product of the first 13 terms (up to 14/14) product = 1 for i in range(2, 15): product *= (i/14) print(f"{product=}") Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard

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