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Divergence of the sum of the reciprocals of the primes

The sum of the reciprocals of all prime numbers diverges; that is:

The sum of the reciprocal of the primes increasing without bound. The x axis is in log scale, showing that the divergence is very slow. The red function is a lower bound that also diverges.

This was proved by Leonhard Euler in 1737,[1] and strengthens Euclid's 3rd-century-BC result that there are infinitely many prime numbers and Nicole Oresme's 14th-century proof of the divergence of the sum of the reciprocals of the integers (harmonic series).

There are a variety of proofs of Euler's result, including a lower bound for the partial sums stating that

for all natural numbers n. The double natural logarithm (log log) indicates that the divergence might be very slow, which is indeed the case. See Meissel–Mertens constant.

The harmonic series

First, we describe how Euler originally discovered the result. He was considering the harmonic series

 

He had already used the following "product formula" to show the existence of infinitely many primes.

 

Here the product is taken over the set of all primes.

Such infinite products are today called Euler products. The product above is a reflection of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic. Euler noted that if there were only a finite number of primes, then the product on the right would clearly converge, contradicting the divergence of the harmonic series.

Proofs

Euler's proof

Euler considered the above product formula and proceeded to make a sequence of audacious leaps of logic. First, he took the natural logarithm of each side, then he used the Taylor series expansion for log x as well as the sum of a converging series:

 

for a fixed constant K < 1. Then he invoked the relation

 

which he explained, for instance in a later 1748 work,[2] by setting x = 1 in the Taylor series expansion

 

This allowed him to conclude that

 

It is almost certain that Euler meant that the sum of the reciprocals of the primes less than n is asymptotic to log log n as n approaches infinity. It turns out this is indeed the case, and a more precise version of this fact was rigorously proved by Franz Mertens in 1874.[3] Thus Euler obtained a correct result by questionable means.

Erdős's proof by upper and lower estimates

The following proof by contradiction comes from Paul Erdős.

Let pi denote the ith prime number. Assume that the sum of the reciprocals of the primes converges.

Then there exists a smallest positive integer k such that

 

For a positive integer x, let Mx denote the set of those n in {1, 2, ..., x} which are not divisible by any prime greater than pk (or equivalently all nx which are a product of powers of primes pipk). We will now derive an upper and a lower estimate for |Mx|, the number of elements in Mx. For large x, these bounds will turn out to be contradictory.

Upper estimate
Every n in Mx can be written as n = m2r with positive integers m and r, where r is square-free. Since only the k primes p1, ..., pk can show up (with exponent 1) in the prime factorization of r, there are at most 2k different possibilities for r. Furthermore, there are at most x possible values for m. This gives us the upper estimate
 
Lower estimate
The remaining x − |Mx| numbers in the set difference {1, 2, ..., x} \ Mx are all divisible by a prime greater than pk. Let Ni,x denote the set of those n in {1, 2, ..., x} which are divisible by the ith prime pi. Then
 
Since the number of integers in Ni,x is at most x/pi (actually zero for pi > x), we get
 
Using (1), this implies
 

This produces a contradiction: when x ≥ 22k + 2, the estimates (2) and (3) cannot both hold, because x/2 ≥ 2kx.

Proof that the series exhibits log-log growth

Here is another proof that actually gives a lower estimate for the partial sums; in particular, it shows that these sums grow at least as fast as log log n. The proof is due to Ivan Niven,[4] adapted from the product expansion idea of Euler. In the following, a sum or product taken over p always represents a sum or product taken over a specified set of primes.

The proof rests upon the following four inequalities:

  • Every positive integer i can be uniquely expressed as the product of a square-free integer and a square as a consequence of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic. Start with
     
    where the βs are 0 (the corresponding power of prime q is even) or 1 (the corresponding power of prime q is odd). Factor out one copy of all the primes whose β is 1, leaving a product of primes to even powers, itself a square. Relabeling:
     
    where the first factor, a product of primes to the first power, is square free. Inverting all the is gives the inequality
     

To see this, note that

 
and
 
That is,   is one of the summands in the expanded product A. And since   is one of the summands of B, every summand   is represented in one of the terms of AB when multiplied out. The inequality follows.
  • The upper estimate for the natural logarithm
     
  • The lower estimate 1 + x < exp(x) for the exponential function, which holds for all x > 0.
  • Let n ≥ 2. The upper bound (using a telescoping sum) for the partial sums (convergence is all we really need)
     

Combining all these inequalities, we see that

 

Dividing through by 5/3 and taking the natural logarithm of both sides gives

 

as desired. Q.E.D.

Using

 

(see the Basel problem), the above constant log 5/3 = 0.51082... can be improved to log π2/6 = 0.4977...; in fact it turns out that

 

where M = 0.261497... is the Meissel–Mertens constant (somewhat analogous to the much more famous Euler–Mascheroni constant).

Proof from Dusart's inequality

From Dusart's inequality, we get

 

Then

 
by the integral test for convergence. This shows that the series on the left diverges.

Geometric and harmonic-series proof

Suppose for contradiction the sum converged. Then, there exists   such that  . Call this sum  .

Now consider the convergent geometric series  .

This geometric series contains the sum of reciprocals of all numbers whose prime factorization contain only primes in the set  .

Consider the subseries  . This is a subseries because   is not divisible by any  .

However, by the Limit comparison test, this subseries diverges by comparing it to the harmonic series. Indeed,  .

Thus, we have found a divergent subseries of the original convergent series, and since all terms are positive, this gives the contradiction. We may conclude   diverges. Q.E.D.

Partial sums

While the partial sums of the reciprocals of the primes eventually exceed any integer value, they never equal an integer.

One proof[5] is by induction: The first partial sum is 1/2, which has the form odd/even. If the nth partial sum (for n ≥ 1) has the form odd/even, then the (n + 1)st sum is

 

as the (n + 1)st prime pn + 1 is odd; since this sum also has an odd/even form, this partial sum cannot be an integer (because 2 divides the denominator but not the numerator), and the induction continues.

Another proof rewrites the expression for the sum of the first n reciprocals of primes (or indeed the sum of the reciprocals of any set of primes) in terms of the least common denominator, which is the product of all these primes. Then each of these primes divides all but one of the numerator terms and hence does not divide the numerator itself; but each prime does divide the denominator. Thus the expression is irreducible and is non-integer.

See also

References

  1. ^ Euler, Leonhard (1737). "Variae observationes circa series infinitas" [Various observations concerning infinite series]. Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Petropolitanae. 9: 160–188.
  2. ^ Euler, Leonhard (1748). Introductio in analysin infinitorum. Tomus Primus [Introduction to Infinite Analysis. Volume I]. Lausanne: Bousquet. p. 228, ex. 1.
  3. ^ Mertens, F. (1874). "Ein Beitrag zur analytischen Zahlentheorie". J. Reine Angew. Math. 78: 46–62.
  4. ^ Niven, Ivan, "A Proof of the Divergence of Σ 1/p", The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 78, No. 3 (Mar. 1971), pp. 272-273. The half-page proof is expanded by William Dunham in Euler: The Master of Us All, pp. 74-76.
  5. ^ Lord, Nick (2015). "Quick proofs that certain sums of fractions are not integers". The Mathematical Gazette. 99: 128–130. doi:10.1017/mag.2014.16. S2CID 123890989.

Sources

External links

  • Caldwell, Chris K. "There are infinitely many primes, but, how big of an infinity?".

divergence, reciprocals, primes, this, article, utilizes, technical, mathematical, notation, logarithms, instances, without, subscript, base, should, interpreted, natural, logarithm, commonly, notated, loge, reciprocals, prime, numbers, diverges, that, recipro. This article utilizes technical mathematical notation for logarithms All instances of log x without a subscript base should be interpreted as a natural logarithm commonly notated as ln x or loge x The sum of the reciprocals of all prime numbers diverges that is The sum of the reciprocal of the primes increasing without bound The x axis is in log scale showing that the divergence is very slow The red function is a lower bound that also diverges p prime 1 p 1 2 1 3 1 5 1 7 1 11 1 13 1 17 displaystyle sum p text prime frac 1 p frac 1 2 frac 1 3 frac 1 5 frac 1 7 frac 1 11 frac 1 13 frac 1 17 cdots infty This was proved by Leonhard Euler in 1737 1 and strengthens Euclid s 3rd century BC result that there are infinitely many prime numbers and Nicole Oresme s 14th century proof of the divergence of the sum of the reciprocals of the integers harmonic series There are a variety of proofs of Euler s result including a lower bound for the partial sums stating that p prime p n 1 p log log n 1 log p 2 6 displaystyle sum scriptstyle p text prime atop scriptstyle p leq n frac 1 p geq log log n 1 log frac pi 2 6 for all natural numbers n The double natural logarithm log log indicates that the divergence might be very slow which is indeed the case See Meissel Mertens constant Contents 1 The harmonic series 2 Proofs 2 1 Euler s proof 2 2 Erdos s proof by upper and lower estimates 2 3 Proof that the series exhibits log log growth 2 4 Proof from Dusart s inequality 2 5 Geometric and harmonic series proof 3 Partial sums 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksThe harmonic series EditFirst we describe how Euler originally discovered the result He was considering the harmonic series n 1 1 n 1 1 2 1 3 1 4 displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 3 frac 1 4 cdots infty He had already used the following product formula to show the existence of infinitely many primes n 1 1 n p 1 1 p 1 p 2 p 1 1 p 1 displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac 1 n prod p left 1 frac 1 p frac 1 p 2 cdots right prod p frac 1 1 p 1 Here the product is taken over the set of all primes Such infinite products are today called Euler products The product above is a reflection of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic Euler noted that if there were only a finite number of primes then the product on the right would clearly converge contradicting the divergence of the harmonic series Proofs EditEuler s proof Edit Euler considered the above product formula and proceeded to make a sequence of audacious leaps of logic First he took the natural logarithm of each side then he used the Taylor series expansion for log x as well as the sum of a converging series log n 1 1 n log p 1 1 p 1 p log 1 1 p p 1 p 1 2 p 2 1 3 p 3 p 1 p 1 2 p 1 p 2 1 3 p 1 p 3 1 4 p 1 p 4 A 1 2 B 1 3 C 1 4 D A K displaystyle begin aligned log left sum n 1 infty frac 1 n right amp log left prod p frac 1 1 p 1 right sum p log left 1 frac 1 p right 5pt amp sum p left frac 1 p frac 1 2p 2 frac 1 3p 3 cdots right 5pt amp sum p frac 1 p frac 1 2 sum p frac 1 p 2 frac 1 3 sum p frac 1 p 3 frac 1 4 sum p frac 1 p 4 cdots 5pt amp A frac 1 2 B frac 1 3 C frac 1 4 D cdots 5pt amp A K end aligned for a fixed constant K lt 1 Then he invoked the relation n 1 1 n log displaystyle sum n 1 infty frac 1 n log infty which he explained for instance in a later 1748 work 2 by setting x 1 in the Taylor series expansionlog 1 1 x n 1 x n n displaystyle log left frac 1 1 x right sum n 1 infty frac x n n This allowed him to conclude thatA 1 2 1 3 1 5 1 7 1 11 log log displaystyle A frac 1 2 frac 1 3 frac 1 5 frac 1 7 frac 1 11 cdots log log infty It is almost certain that Euler meant that the sum of the reciprocals of the primes less than n is asymptotic to log log n as n approaches infinity It turns out this is indeed the case and a more precise version of this fact was rigorously proved by Franz Mertens in 1874 3 Thus Euler obtained a correct result by questionable means Erdos s proof by upper and lower estimates Edit The following proof by contradiction comes from Paul Erdos Let pi denote the i th prime number Assume that the sum of the reciprocals of the primes converges Then there exists a smallest positive integer k such that i k 1 1 p i lt 1 2 1 displaystyle sum i k 1 infty frac 1 p i lt frac 1 2 qquad 1 For a positive integer x let Mx denote the set of those n in 1 2 x which are not divisible by any prime greater than pk or equivalently all n x which are a product of powers of primes pi pk We will now derive an upper and a lower estimate for Mx the number of elements in Mx For large x these bounds will turn out to be contradictory Upper estimate Every n in Mx can be written as n m2r with positive integers m and r where r is square free Since only the k primes p1 pk can show up with exponent 1 in the prime factorization of r there are at most 2k different possibilities for r Furthermore there are at most x possible values for m This gives us the upper estimate M x 2 k x 2 displaystyle M x leq 2 k sqrt x qquad 2 Lower estimate The remaining x Mx numbers in the set difference 1 2 x Mx are all divisible by a prime greater than pk Let Ni x denote the set of those n in 1 2 x which are divisible by the i th prime pi Then 1 2 x M x i k 1 N i x displaystyle 1 2 ldots x setminus M x bigcup i k 1 infty N i x Since the number of integers in Ni x is at most x pi actually zero for pi gt x we get x M x i k 1 N i x lt i k 1 x p i displaystyle x M x leq sum i k 1 infty N i x lt sum i k 1 infty frac x p i Using 1 this implies x 2 lt M x 3 displaystyle frac x 2 lt M x qquad 3 This produces a contradiction when x 22k 2 the estimates 2 and 3 cannot both hold because x 2 2k x Proof that the series exhibits log log growth Edit Here is another proof that actually gives a lower estimate for the partial sums in particular it shows that these sums grow at least as fast as log log n The proof is due to Ivan Niven 4 adapted from the product expansion idea of Euler In the following a sum or product taken over p always represents a sum or product taken over a specified set of primes The proof rests upon the following four inequalities Every positive integer i can be uniquely expressed as the product of a square free integer and a square as a consequence of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic Start with i q 1 2 a 1 b 1 q 2 2 a 2 b 2 q r 2 a r b r displaystyle i q 1 2 alpha 1 beta 1 cdot q 2 2 alpha 2 beta 2 cdots q r 2 alpha r beta r where the bs are 0 the corresponding power of prime q is even or 1 the corresponding power of prime q is odd Factor out one copy of all the primes whose b is 1 leaving a product of primes to even powers itself a square Relabeling i p 1 p 2 p s b 2 displaystyle i p 1 p 2 cdots p s cdot b 2 where the first factor a product of primes to the first power is square free Inverting all the i s gives the inequality i 1 n 1 i p n 1 1 p k 1 n 1 k 2 A B displaystyle sum i 1 n frac 1 i leq left prod p leq n left 1 frac 1 p right right cdot left sum k 1 n frac 1 k 2 right A cdot B To see this note that1 i 1 p 1 p 2 p s 1 b 2 displaystyle frac 1 i frac 1 p 1 p 2 cdots p s cdot frac 1 b 2 and 1 1 p 1 1 1 p 2 1 1 p s 1 p 1 1 p 2 1 p s 1 p 1 p 2 p s displaystyle begin aligned left 1 frac 1 p 1 right left 1 frac 1 p 2 right ldots left 1 frac 1 p s right amp left frac 1 p 1 right left frac 1 p 2 right cdots left frac 1 p s right ldots amp frac 1 p 1 p 2 cdots p s ldots end aligned That is 1 p 1 p 2 p s displaystyle 1 p 1 p 2 cdots p s is one of the summands in the expanded product A And since 1 b 2 displaystyle 1 b 2 is one of the summands of B every summand 1 i displaystyle 1 i is represented in one of the terms of AB when multiplied out The inequality follows The upper estimate for the natural logarithm log n 1 1 n 1 d x x i 1 n i i 1 d x x lt 1 i lt i 1 n 1 i displaystyle begin aligned log n 1 amp int 1 n 1 frac dx x amp sum i 1 n underbrace int i i 1 frac dx x lt frac 1 i amp lt sum i 1 n frac 1 i end aligned The lower estimate 1 x lt exp x for the exponential function which holds for all x gt 0 Let n 2 The upper bound using a telescoping sum for the partial sums convergence is all we really need k 1 n 1 k 2 lt 1 k 2 n 1 k 1 2 1 k 1 2 1 k 2 1 4 gt 1 k 2 1 2 3 1 n 1 2 lt 5 3 displaystyle begin aligned sum k 1 n frac 1 k 2 amp lt 1 sum k 2 n underbrace left frac 1 k frac 1 2 frac 1 k frac 1 2 right frac 1 k 2 frac 1 4 gt frac 1 k 2 amp 1 frac 2 3 frac 1 n frac 1 2 lt frac 5 3 end aligned Combining all these inequalities we see thatlog n 1 lt i 1 n 1 i p n 1 1 p k 1 n 1 k 2 lt 5 3 p n exp 1 p 5 3 exp p n 1 p displaystyle begin aligned log n 1 amp lt sum i 1 n frac 1 i amp leq prod p leq n left 1 frac 1 p right sum k 1 n frac 1 k 2 amp lt frac 5 3 prod p leq n exp left frac 1 p right amp frac 5 3 exp left sum p leq n frac 1 p right end aligned Dividing through by 5 3 and taking the natural logarithm of both sides giveslog log n 1 log 5 3 lt p n 1 p displaystyle log log n 1 log frac 5 3 lt sum p leq n frac 1 p as desired Q E D Using k 1 1 k 2 p 2 6 displaystyle sum k 1 infty frac 1 k 2 frac pi 2 6 see the Basel problem the above constant log 5 3 0 51082 can be improved to log p2 6 0 4977 in fact it turns out thatlim n p n 1 p log log n M displaystyle lim n to infty left sum p leq n frac 1 p log log n right M where M 0 261497 is the Meissel Mertens constant somewhat analogous to the much more famous Euler Mascheroni constant Proof from Dusart s inequality Edit From Dusart s inequality we getp n lt n log n n log log n for n 6 displaystyle p n lt n log n n log log n quad mbox for n geq 6 Then n 1 1 p n n 6 1 p n n 6 1 n log n n log log n n 6 1 2 n log n displaystyle begin aligned sum n 1 infty frac 1 p n amp geq sum n 6 infty frac 1 p n amp geq sum n 6 infty frac 1 n log n n log log n amp geq sum n 6 infty frac 1 2n log n infty end aligned by the integral test for convergence This shows that the series on the left diverges Geometric and harmonic series proof Edit Suppose for contradiction the sum converged Then there exists n displaystyle n such that i n 1 1 p i lt 1 displaystyle sum i geq n 1 frac 1 p i lt 1 Call this sum x displaystyle x Now consider the convergent geometric series x x 2 x 3 displaystyle x x 2 x 3 cdots This geometric series contains the sum of reciprocals of all numbers whose prime factorization contain only primes in the set p n 1 p n 2 displaystyle p n 1 p n 2 cdots Consider the subseries i 1 1 1 i p 1 p 2 p n displaystyle sum i geq 1 frac 1 1 i p 1 p 2 cdots p n This is a subseries because 1 i p 1 p 2 p n displaystyle 1 i p 1 p 2 cdots p n is not divisible by any p j j n displaystyle p j j leq n However by the Limit comparison test this subseries diverges by comparing it to the harmonic series Indeed lim i 1 i p 1 p 2 p n i p 1 p 2 p n textstyle lim i to infty frac 1 i p 1 p 2 cdots p n i p 1 p 2 cdots p n Thus we have found a divergent subseries of the original convergent series and since all terms are positive this gives the contradiction We may conclude i 1 1 p i textstyle sum i geq 1 frac 1 p i diverges Q E D Partial sums EditWhile the partial sums of the reciprocals of the primes eventually exceed any integer value they never equal an integer One proof 5 is by induction The first partial sum is 1 2 which has the form odd even If the n th partial sum for n 1 has the form odd even then the n 1 st sum isodd even 1 p n 1 odd p n 1 even even p n 1 odd even even odd even displaystyle frac text odd text even frac 1 p n 1 frac text odd cdot p n 1 text even text even cdot p n 1 frac text odd text even text even frac text odd text even as the n 1 st prime pn 1 is odd since this sum also has an odd even form this partial sum cannot be an integer because 2 divides the denominator but not the numerator and the induction continues Another proof rewrites the expression for the sum of the first n reciprocals of primes or indeed the sum of the reciprocals of any set of primes in terms of the least common denominator which is the product of all these primes Then each of these primes divides all but one of the numerator terms and hence does not divide the numerator itself but each prime does divide the denominator Thus the expression is irreducible and is non integer See also EditEuclid s theorem that there are infinitely many primes Small set combinatorics Brun s theorem on the convergent sum of reciprocals of the twin primes List of sums of reciprocalsReferences Edit Euler Leonhard 1737 Variae observationes circa series infinitas Various observations concerning infinite series Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Petropolitanae 9 160 188 Euler Leonhard 1748 Introductio in analysin infinitorum Tomus Primus Introduction to Infinite Analysis Volume I Lausanne Bousquet p 228 ex 1 Mertens F 1874 Ein Beitrag zur analytischen Zahlentheorie J Reine Angew Math 78 46 62 Niven Ivan A Proof of the Divergence of S 1 p The American Mathematical Monthly Vol 78 No 3 Mar 1971 pp 272 273 The half page proof is expanded by William Dunham in Euler The Master of Us All pp 74 76 Lord Nick 2015 Quick proofs that certain sums of fractions are not integers The Mathematical Gazette 99 128 130 doi 10 1017 mag 2014 16 S2CID 123890989 Sources Dunham William 1999 Euler The Master of Us All MAA pp 61 79 ISBN 0 88385 328 0 External links EditCaldwell Chris K There are infinitely many primes but how big of an infinity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Divergence of the sum of the reciprocals of the primes amp oldid 1129260797, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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