Does a Closed Form Exist for the Harmonic Series?

Dansuer
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HI!

I was wandering if there is a proof that the harmonic sum \sum\frac{1}{k} has no closed form. Something like the proof that an equation with degree more than 4 has no solution in terms of radicals.
 
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Dansuer said:
HI!

I was wandering if there is a proof that the harmonic sum \sum\frac{1}{k} has no closed form. Something like the proof that an equation with degree more than 4 has no solution in terms of radicals.
This series diverges to infinity.
 
yeah that's cool but that's not what I'm looking for. Maybe I've not been very clear.
I'll try again.

There is not a closed form expression of the harmonic sum \sum^{n}_{0}\frac{1}{k}. which means it cannot be expressed in terms of elementary functions (e^x,sin(n), log(n), ...).
This is a closed form for \sum^{n}_{0} k

\sum^{n}_{0} k = \frac{n(n+1)}{2}

Does a closed form exist, but it's not yet been found ?
or it had been proved that it cannot exist ?
or maybe there is, maybe not, nobody knows anything about it ?
 

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