List of sums of reciprocals

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description In mathematics and especially number theory, the sum of reciprocals (or sum of inverses) generally is computed for the reciprocals of some or all of the positive integers (counting numbers)—that is, it is generally the sum of unit fractions. If infinitely many numbers have their reciprocals summed, generally the terms are given in a certain sequence and the first n of them are summed, then one more is included to give the sum of the first n+1 of them, etc.

If only finitely many numbers are included, the key issue is usually to find a simple expression for the value of the sum, or to require the sum to be less than a certain value, or to determine whether the sum is ever an integer.

For an infinite series of reciprocals, the issues are twofold: First, does the sequence of sums diverge—that is, does it eventually exceed any given number—or does it converge, meaning there is some number that it gets arbitrarily close to without ever exceeding it? (A set of positive integers is said to be large if the sum of its reciprocals diverges, and small if it converges.) Second, if it converges, what is a simple expression for the value it converges to, is that value rational or irrational, and is that value algebraic or transcendental?[1]

Finitely many terms

  • The harmonic mean of a set of positive integers is the number of numbers times the reciprocal of the sum of their reciprocals.
  • The optic equation requires the sum of the reciprocals of two positive integers a and b to equal the reciprocal of a third positive integer c. All solutions are given by a = mn + m2, b = mn + n2, c = mn. This equation appears in various contexts in elementary geometry.
  • The Fermat–Catalan conjecture concerns a certain Diophantine equation, equating the sum of two terms, each a positive integer raised to a positive integer power, to a third term that is also a positive integer raised to a positive integer power (with the base integers having no prime factor in common). The conjecture asks whether the equation has an infinitude of solutions in which the sum of the reciprocals of the three exponents in the equation must be less than 1. The purpose of this restriction is to preclude the known infinitude of solutions in which two exponents are 2 and the other exponent is any even number.
  • The n-th harmonic number, which is the sum of the reciprocals of the first n positive integers, is never an integer except for the case n = 1.
  • Moreover, József Kürschák proved in 1918 that the sum of the reciprocals of consecutive natural numbers (whether starting from 1 or not) is never an integer.
  • The sum of the reciprocals of the first n primes is not an integer for any n.
  • There are 14 distinct combinations of four integers such that the sum of their reciprocals is 1, of which six use four distinct integers and eight repeat at least one integer.
  • An Egyptian fraction is the sum of a finite number of reciprocals of positive integers. According to the proof of the Erdős–Graham problem, if the set of integers greater than one is partitioned into finitely many subsets, then one of the subsets can be used to form an Egyptian fraction representation of 1.
  • The Erdős–Straus conjecture states that for all integers n ≥ 2, the rational number 4/n can be expressed as the sum of three reciprocals of positive integers.
  • The Fermat quotient with base 2, which is 2p11p for odd prime p, when expressed in mod p and multiplied by –2, equals the sum of the reciprocals mod p of the numbers lying in the first half of the range {1, p − 1}.
  • In any triangle, the sum of the reciprocals of the altitudes equals the reciprocal of the radius of the incircle (regardless of whether or not they are integers).
  • In a right triangle, the sum of the reciprocals of the squares of the altitudes from the legs (equivalently, of the squares of the legs themselves) equals the reciprocal of the square of the altitude from the hypotenuse (the inverse Pythagorean theorem). This holds whether or not the numbers are integers; there is a formula (see here) that generates all integer cases.
  • A triangle not necessarily in the Euclidean plane can be specified as having angles πp, πq, and πr. Then the triangle is in Euclidean space if the sum of the reciprocals of p, q, and r equals 1, spherical space if that sum is greater than 1, and hyperbolic space if the sum is less than 1.
  • A harmonic divisor number is a positive integer whose divisors have a harmonic mean that is an integer. The first five of these are 1, 6, 28, 140, and 270. It is not known whether any harmonic divisor numbers (besides 1) are odd, but there are no odd ones less than 1024.
  • The sum of the reciprocals of the divisors of a perfect number is 2.
  • When eight points are distributed on the surface of a sphere with the aim of maximizing the distance between them in some sense, the resulting shape corresponds to a square antiprism. Specific methods of distributing the points include, for example, minimizing the sum of all reciprocals of squares of distances between points.

Infinitely many terms

Convergent series

Template:For

  • A sum-free sequence of increasing positive integers is one for which no number is the sum of any subset of the previous ones. The sum of the reciprocals of the numbers in any sum-free sequence is less than Template:Math .
  • The sum of the reciprocals of the twin primes, of which there may be finitely many or infinitely many, is known to be finite and is called Brun's constant, approximately Template:Math . The reciprocal of five conventionally appears twice in the sum.
  • The sum of the reciprocals of the Proth primes, of which there may be finitely many or infinitely many, is known to be finite, Template:Nobr[2]
  • The prime quadruplets are pairs of twin primes with only one odd number between them. The sum of the reciprocals of the numbers in prime quadruplets is Template:Nobr
  • The sum of the reciprocals of the powers  nn  is approximately equal to Template:Math . The sum is exactly equal to a definite integral:  n=11 nn=01 dx  xx 
This identity was discovered by Johann Bernoulli in 1697, and is now known as one of the two Sophomore's dream identities.
  • The reciprocal Fibonacci constant is the sum of the reciprocals of the Fibonacci numbers, which is known to be finite and irrational and approximately equal to 3.3599 . For other finite sums of subsets of the reciprocals of Fibonacci numbers, see here.
  • An exponential factorial is an operation recursively defined as  a0=1,an=nan1. For example,  a4=4321  where the exponents are evaluated from the top down. The sum of the reciprocals of the exponential factorials from 1 onward is approximately 1.6111 and is transcendental.
  • A "powerful number" is a positive integer for which every prime appearing in its prime factorization appears there at least twice. The sum of the reciprocals of the powerful numbers is close to 1.9436 .[4]
  • The reciprocals of the non-negative integer powers of 2 sum to Template:Math . This is a particular case of the sum of the reciprocals of any geometric series where the first term and the common ratio are positive integers. If the first term is Template:Mvar and the common ratio is Template:Mvar then the sum is Template:Nobr
  • A palindromic number is one that remains the same when its digits are reversed. The sum of the reciprocals of the palindromic numbers converges to approximately Template:Math .

Divergent series

Inverse powers

Sums of inverses can be extended to sum of inverse powers:

See also

References

Template:Reflist

  1. Unless given here, references are in the linked articles.
  2. Template:Cite journal
  3. Template:MathWorld
  4. Template:Cite journal