- #1
mathmaniac1
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sigma(1/n)
Is there a formula for it?
Is there a formula for it?
mathmaniac said:Is there a formula for it?
mathmaniac said:sigma(1/n)
Is there a formula for it?
Prove It said:Also note that the infinite series is divergent, and so that can not possibly have a closed form.
kaliprasad said:The above statement is not quite correct as
sigma n = n(n+1)/2 is divergergent but it has a colsed form
Prove It said:The FINITE series has a closed form. The INFINITE series does not. There is nothing wrong with what I said.
mathmaniac said:Why not a formula f(n) such that f(n)-f(n-1)=1/n
Why isn't it possible?
A summation formula is a mathematical formula used to calculate the sum of a series of numbers. It is denoted by the symbol Σ (sigma) and is often used to represent the sum of a sequence of terms.
The purpose of a summation formula is to make it easier to calculate the sum of a large number of terms. It allows for the sum to be expressed in a compact form, making it more efficient to calculate and work with.
A summation formula is a mathematical expression used to calculate the sum of a series of terms, while a series is the actual sum of those terms. In other words, a series is the result of applying a summation formula.
To use a summation formula, you first need to identify the given series of terms and the pattern or rule that governs their relationship. Then, you can plug the terms into the formula and simplify to find the sum.
Some common summation formulas include the arithmetic series formula (Σn = (n/2)(a + l)), the geometric series formula (Σn = a(r^n - 1)/(r-1)), and the binomial series formula (Σn = (n+1)Ck a^(n+1-k)b^k).