T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1651.1 | what about other than 3? | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Mon Aug 10 1992 01:36 | 7 |
| What about sum(n=1..oo) 1/n^p for p>3
do we know anything about them? i.e do we have a value for this sum?
we know that for p=3, it is not known, does that mean for all p>= 3 it
is also not known?
/nasser
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1651.2 | more info | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Mon Aug 10 1992 12:52 | 2 |
| I asked about this, all even sums are known, i.e any
sum(n=1..oo) 1/n^p where p is even is known.
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1651.3 | On the basis of 15 minutes of research | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire. | Mon Aug 10 1992 17:53 | 20 |
| N sum(1/j^N) very approximately (i.e., BASIC single precision)
2 1.64473 Pi^2/6
3 1.20205 Pi^3/25.8
4 1.08232 Pi^4/90
5 1.03693 Pi^5/295
6 1.01734 Pi^6/945
7 1.00835 Pi^7/2995
8 1.00408 Pi^8/9450
9 1.00201 ...
On this tissue of evidence I conjecture that
IF R[2k] is defined by: sum(n=1..oo) 1/n^p = R[2k]*Pi^2k,
THEN R[2k+1] = SQRT(R[2k]*R[2k+2]).
John
dictated but not spell-checked :-)
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1651.4 | closed formula for even N's | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Tue Aug 11 1992 01:58 | 24 |
| > 5 1.03693 Pi^5/295
you get the 295 offcourse by doing Pi^5/1.03693, and approximate
to it.
the problem I think is that we dont know if the multiplier of
Pi^N (when N is odd is rational or irrational), I think that is
the problem here.
can you see a pattern for the odd N's multipliers?
the values for even N can all be obtained anlytically exactly
the formula is (for even N's):
2k
(2 Pi)
sum(n=1..oo) 1/n^2k = ---------- | B_2k |
2 (2K)!
the books says, this holds for all natural numbers K, where B_2k are
the Bernoulli numbers. (you can see if your even N results matches the
above formula).
will talk more on this later..
/Nasser
I spell checked (almost)
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1651.6 | Riemann zeta function | CX3PT2::KOWTOW::J_MARSH | | Tue Aug 11 1992 14:06 | 10 |
| FWIW,
Sum 1/(n^k) n = 1 ... infinity
equals the Riemann zeta function with argument k.
Perhaps there exist efficient routines for calculating the Riemann zeta
function?
-- Jeff
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1651.7 | | GAUSS::ROTH | Geometry is the real life! | Tue Aug 11 1992 14:16 | 15 |
| You're asking for zeta(3) which is known to be irrational, but
it is not known if it is made up of any simple relation involving
pi or not.
You can evaluate the sum accurately with Euler Maclurin summation
by basically thinking of the sum as a trapezoidal rule approx to
an integral and expressing the error comitted as an asymptotic
expansion involving the odd order derivatives at the endpoints
of summation. Maple would do this for you without your having
to even think about it, but I don't have access to it right now.
People have evaluated numerous continued fraction convergants of
this in the hopes of finding gold there...
- Jim
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1651.8 | We've got computers, we're tapping phone lines,... | SSAG::LARY | Laughter & hope & a sock in the eye | Tue Aug 11 1992 15:02 | 48 |
| (This reply has been re-entered to fix an integration error that no self-
respecting schoolchild would have made. Sigh...)
Given this is a historic unsolved problem, I don't expect we can contribute
much to a formal solution. BUT, we've got a tool that Riemann and Hilbert
never had, i.e. computers, which we can maybe use to come up with some
intelligent conjectures...
An example of the Obvious Brute Force approach for Sum(n=1...inf)(1/n�) is:
1) Evaluate Sum(n=1...M)(1/n�) to a gazillion digits for large M
2) Divide by PI�, again to a gazillion digits
3) Examine the result for the appearence of repeating decimal sequences, which
would indicate a rational number, and form the appropriate conjecture.
The problem with the OBF approach is that 1/n� converges very slowly, so most
of our gazillion digits are bogus. So, an interesting subproblem here that we
MIGHT be able to contribute to is, how can you accelerate the convergence of
Sum(n=1...M)(1/n�)?
Here's a couple of feeble attempts...
1) Sum(all n>0)(1/n�) is equal to Product(all prime p>1) (1/(1-1/p�)).
So, if you had fast gazillion-digit Ln and Exp routines, you could
get a better approximation, as the K'th term of the log of this product
is approximately 1/(K*lnK)� which converges faster - but not much!
2) Since 1/x� is monotonically decreasing as x->inf,
Integral(x=K...inf)(1/x� dx)
< Sum(n=K...inf) (1/n^3)
< Integral(x=K...inf)(1/(x-1)^3 dx)
Or,
1/2K� < Sum(n=K...inf) (1/n^3) < 1/2(K-1)�
Or,
Approx(K) < Sum(n=1...inf)(1/n�) < Approx(K) + (2K-1)/(2K�(K-1)�)
where Approx(K) = Sum(n=1...K)(1/n�) + 1/2(K-1)�
The error term is < 1/(K-1)�, which is pretty good - it means, for
instance, that we can get 18-digit accuracy from 1,000,000 terms
of the sum (using >25-digit arithmetic). I believe that if you "split
the difference" between the two integrals above, i.e.
Approx(K) = Sum(n=1...K)(1/n�) + 1/2(K-�)�,
the absolute value of the error (which can be positive or negative now)
becomes < 1/K^4, but I can't prove it yet...
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1651.9 | Proof of previous accuracy claim | SSAG::LARY | Laughter & hope & a sock in the eye | Tue Aug 11 1992 16:42 | 32 |
| Here's a proof (with some algebraic manipulation eliminated) that for n > 1,
Integral(x=n...inf)(1/(x-�)� dx) - Sum(k=n...inf)(1/k�) < 1/8(n-�)^4
1) if Y(k) = Integral(x=k...k+1)(1/(x-�)� dx), Y(k) = k/(k�-�)�
2) k/(k�-�)� > k/k^4 = 1/k� so Y(k) > 1/k�
3) if Z(k) = Integral(x=k...k+1) (1/2(x-�)^5 dx), Z(k) = (4k�+k)/8(k�-�)^4
4) (4k�+k)/8(k�-�)^4 > 4k�/8(k�-�)^4 = k�/2(k�-�)^4 so Z(k) > k�/2(k�-�)^4
5) Y(k)-Z(k) < k/(k�-�)� - k�/2(k�-�)^4 = k/(k�-�)�(1-k�/2(k�-�)�)
6) 1-k�/2(k�-�)� < 1-k�/2k^4 = 1-1/2k� < (1-1/4k�)� = (k�-�)/k^4, so
7) Y(k)-Z(k) < (k/(k�-�))*((k�-�)/k^4) = 1/k�
Now we can use the results from (2) and (7) and sum over k to get
Sum(n=k...inf) (Y(k)-Z(k)) < Sum(n=k...inf)(1/k�) < Sum(n=k...inf) (Y(k))
Which gives us the result we want, since
Sum(n=k...inf)Z(k) = Integral(x=k...inf)(1/2(x-�)^5 dx) = 1/8(n-�)^4
This means that Sum(n=1...1000000)(1/n�) + 2/1999999� should be within
1.3*10^-25 of Sum(n=1...inf)(1/n�), or about 25 digits accuracy, if computed
with > 33 digit precision.
Anyone have a BIGNUM package and some computer time?
Richie
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1651.10 | "You're no Dave Hilbert" | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire. | Tue Aug 11 1992 18:34 | 6 |
| > Anyone have a BIGNUM package and some computer time?
I just picked up the MP package from note 26.6 and will soon be making
good use (VAX 9000-400) of Approx(K) to verify my earlier conjecture. :-)
John
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1651.11 | In that case... | SSAG::LARY | Laughter & hope & a sock in the eye | Wed Aug 12 1992 03:56 | 12 |
| Well, if you'er going to invest all that time, the least I can do is fix the
other dumb error in my formulae, namely I believe I counted 1/k� twice when
I spliced the finite and infinite sum together; the "real" Approx(K) is:
Approx(K) = Sum(n=1...K)(1/n�) + 1/2(K+�)�
(and this appears to check out, according to DECALC, which shows Approx(K)
converging as rapidly as expected; Approx(2000) = 1.20205690315960 is accurate
to 12-14 places after the decimal point, depending on what floating point
format DECALC uses...)
Richie
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