this post was submitted on 11 Sep 2024
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tbf, the 2nd sum is exactly the first one just multiplied by 1/2. though i get that the progression is natural, even, and odd.
the last one is definitely ~~odd~~ puzzling, but i cannot intuitively get the first one. how does summing the inverse of triangular number equal 2?
I believe starting with 1/1 which equals 1, you are then adding infinitely (fractions) on top of the 1. So 1, then 1 1/2, ect, so the next full integer to be hit (infinitely down the line) would be 2.
I don't do high level math so I hope this explanation is correct or intelligible, this is just how I understand it intuitively
But the first few values are:
1 + 1/3 + 1/6 + 1/10 + 1/15 + 1/21 + 1/28...
I really don't see any pattern there showing why it converges to 2 exactly
Edit:
After thinking some more, you could write the sum as:
(Sum from n=1 to infinity of): 2/(n * (n + 1))
That sum is smaller than the sum of:
2 * (1/n^2^) which converges to π^2^/3
So I can see why it converges, just not where to.
Those add to 1.75, just keep adding (infinitely)