| Main Article | Discussion | Related Articles [?] | Bibliography [?] | External Links [?] | Citable Version [?] | | | | | | | | This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer. [edit intro] This article is about Power series. For other uses of the term Power, please see Power (disambiguation). In mathematics, a power series is an infinite series whose terms involve successive powers of a variable, typically with real or complex coefficients. If the series converges, its value determines a function of the variable involved. Conversely, given a function it may be possible to form a power series from successive derivatives of the function: this Taylor series is then a power series in its own right. Formally, let z be a variable and a n {\displaystyle a_{n}} be a sequence of real or complex coefficients. The associated power series is ∑ n = 0 ∞ a n z n . {\displaystyle \sum _{n=0}^{\infty }a_{n}z^{n}.\,} . ## Contents * 1 Radius of convergence * 1.1 Convergence tests * 2 Algebra of power series * 3 Formal power series * 4 Inversion of power series ## Radius of convergence[edit] Over the complex numbers the series will have a radius of convergence R, a real number with the property that the series converges for all complex numbers z with | z | < R {\displaystyle \vert z\vert