Adding 0 to 1: What is the Sum?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of adding all the numbers between 0 and 1 and what the resulting sum would be. It is concluded that the limit does not exist and that there are infinitely many numbers between .5 and 1, making the sum infinite. This is further supported by the fact that the series \sum^{\infty}_{i =1} \frac{1}{i} is divergent. The conversation also touches on the concept of adding up all the real or rational numbers between 0 and 1, both of which would produce an infinite sum. The discussion then delves into the idea of using the integral test to establish the divergence of the series and the importance of defining the type of numbers being
  • #1
whozum
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If I added all the numbers between 0 and 1, what do I get?
 
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  • #2
Limit doesn't exist. There are infinitely many numbers between .5 and 1, so the sum is more than [itex]\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2}+...=\frac{1}{2}\infty=\infty[/itex].
 
  • #3
It would depend on what 'numbers' you're talking about.
If you're talking about the reals, the answer is indeed [itex]\infty[/itex]
 
  • #4
Yeah weird to think about I guess, but

[tex] \sum^{\infty}_{i =1} \frac{1}{i} [/tex] is a divergent series, so it has to be true. Seems that it is not something easy to think about intuitively
 
  • #5
Either adding up "all" the reals or rationals between 0 and 1 will produce infinity
 
  • #6
TOKAMAK said:
Yeah weird to think about I guess, but

[tex] \sum^{\infty}_{i =1} \frac{1}{i} [/tex] is a divergent series, so it has to be true. Seems that it is not something easy to think about intuitively

It seems strange that for p=1, the p-series is divergent. Why is this so? I mean, it seems like each term will be smaller than the one before it, and [itex]\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}=0[/itex] so it (at least intuitively) should be convergent.

Any thoughts on this?
 
  • #7
Its just a case of adding up a lot of drops of water. The way that these drops of water are divided they happen to have an infinite volume. Obviously if there is some way to add them up in a rational way there will be a border between rational and irrational. Another way to look at it is that a sum is an integral where dx or dy or whatever is not infinitely small, however if the integral makes no sense then obviously the sum which is just an overestimate (for all but finitely many points depending on where you start the sum and your step size) won't either. 1/x integrates to lnx which as you are probably ware has an infinite amount of area under its curve as x approaches infinity.
 
  • #8
I don't know if this is really adding to the discussion or not, but if you perform the integral test on the (harmonic) series, (using a as any constant, doesn't matter), you end up with

[tex] \int^{\infty}_{a} dx \frac{1}{x} [/tex]

when integrated gives

[tex] \ln{x}|^{\infty}_{a} = \ln{\infty} - \ln{a} = \ln{\frac{\infty}{a}} [/tex]

But infinity divided by a constant is just infinity, and the natural log of infinity isn't bounded either. So, I guess through the use of the integral test we can indeed establish that the series diverges. To be honest, I don't remember if there was in fact a reason given in my calc class as to why the integral test works (it's been some time), so perhaps someone might have a better, or more in depth answer as to why the harmonic series diverges, and therefore, adding all the real numbers between, say, 0 and 1 is infinite.
 
  • #9
apmcavoy said:
It seems strange that for p=1, the p-series is divergent. Why is this so? I mean, it seems like each term will be smaller than the one before it, and [itex]\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}=0[/itex] so it (at least intuitively) should be convergent.

Any thoughts on this?

One way to see the divergence is to group the terms like so (this is a little sloppy how I'm dealing with the limit, but you can make everything precise):

1+1/2+1/3+1/4+...

=1+1/2+(1/3+1/4)+(1/5+1/6+1/7+1/8)+(1/9+...1/16)+...

>=1+1/2+(1/4+1/4)+(1/8+1/8+1/8+1/8)+(1/16+...+1/16)+...

=1+1/2+2*(1/4)+4*(1/8)+8*(1/16)+...

=1+1/2+1/2+1/2+...

so by adding enoiugh terms you can make the original series as large as we like.


The integral comparison test works fine as well and shows that the divergence is logarithmic (though you might have guessed that from the above). The integral test can be loosely justified by drawing the graph of 1/x and drawing a rectangle of hieght 1 from x=1 to 2, a rectangle of height 1/2 from 2 to 3, a rectangle of height 1/3 from 3 to 4, etc. The area of the first n rectangles is the sum of the first n terms of the harmonic series, and contains the graph of 1/x and hence the harmonic series diverges at least as fast as log. By shifting the rectangles one unit left you get the rectangles below the 1/x graph, so they will both have the same order of growth.


Incidently, if you have any uncountable set of positive real numbers, then you can find a sequence of (distinct) numbers in this set whose series diverges.
 
  • #10
If you include 0 and 1, then your sum would be 1. (I assume that with "numbers", you meant the integers).
 
  • #11
arildno said:
If you include 0 and 1, then your sum would be 1. (I assume that with "numbers", you meant the integers).
I'm not quite sure that would make too much sense given the way the poster phrased the question.

But yes, it is quite important to define what type of numbers you are talking about before you can prove anything.
 
  • #12
whozum said:
If I added all the numbers between 0 and 1, what do I get?
I don't think this makes a lot sense, either.
 
  • #13
Adding up any uncountably indexed set of (positive) real numbers must necessarily yields infinity; partition the unit interval (in this case) up into the disjoint intervals

[1/n,1/(n-1))

each if the sum were in any sense to be finite then there can only be a finite number in each class, but then the set is a countable union of finite sets, hence countable, contradicting the assumption we were summing an uncountable set of numbers.
 
  • #14
That makes sense. It just didn't seem divergent intuitively.

Thanks.
 
  • #15
Oh, you're the poster who wanted sums to converge exactly when the terms in the sum went to zero. If so then you should do p-adic analysis since that is what happens there (but note there are some strange things, because in 3-adic analysis the sequence 2, 22, 222, 2222, 22222, .. converges (and to something quite strange).
 
  • #16
The requirement that sequence an go to 0 in order that the sum
[tex]\Sigma_{n=0}^{\infty} a_n[/tex] converge is a necessary condition, not a sufficient condition.
 
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  • #17
arildno said:
If you include 0 and 1, then your sum would be 1. (I assume that with "numbers", you meant the integers).

I think that's a weak assumption. On the real scale and numbers between 0 and 1 clearly means any real number between the two if you ask me.


Thanks for everyones input.
 
  • #18
*cough* and equally clearly asking what the sum of all numbers between 0 and 1 is makes so much sense..

1. what order are you summing them in and

2. obviously it diverges and if you'd bothered to check if this question had been asked before in this forum (which it has, in some sense; there was a thread about uncountable indices and summation, if not two)
 
  • #19
matt grime said:
*cough* and equally clearly asking what the sum of all numbers between 0 and 1 is makes so much sense..

1. what order are you summing them in and

2. obviously it diverges and if you'd bothered to check if this question had been asked before in this forum (which it has, in some sense; there was a thread about uncountable indices and summation, if not two)

Sorry I don't have a PhD in math, i don't know what an uncountable index is. I don't see why it wouldn't make sense, and I don't see why the order would matter.

My question was answered, I said thanks, what more do you want?
 
  • #20
The following set of numbers, {1,-1/2,1/3,-1/4,1/5,-1/6...} can be summed in (at least) two different ways to give two different answers. Thus the order of the summation matters (first year undergraduate analysis in the UK, not sure what year in the US, and quite possibly high school in other countries).

Irrespective of the order issue, the set you want to sum over contains only positive terms, and one ordering of them would be to sum 1/2, 1/3, 1/4 etc which is known to diverge.

We know how to add up a finite number of terms:

x+y+z,

we know how to take the limit to a set indexed by the natural numbers

x_1+x_2+x_3+...

but how were you going to add up all the numbers in [0,1]? What limit were you going to take? This is why, to me, it "clearly doesn't make sense" since there is no indication given of how to actually start summing this series. (the infinite set of numbers between 0 and 1 cannot be indexed by the natural numbers and is thus uncountable, that is the definition of uncountable).

You said, rudely in my opinion, that arildno made a weak assumption, hence my (rude) reply; I'd say he made the most sensible assumption of them all.
 
  • #21
whozum said:
I think that's a weak assumption. On the real scale and numbers between 0 and 1 clearly means any real number between the two if you ask me.


Thanks for everyones input.
I assumed that you asked a sensible question. If that's a weak assumption, so be it.
 
  • #22
Any infinite sum whose set of terms are anywhere dense will diverge.

Any sequence whose set of terms are anywhere dense will diverge.

I don't know how widely known these two staments are as I thoguht of them and proved themself, but as they only require a basic amount of analysis to prove doubt I am the first person to notice this general property of these classes of sequences and sums.
 
  • #23
Maybe a simple way to relate that the summation of all reals between 0 and 1 is divergent is this:

Just take a whole bunch of high numbers and start adding them:
.9 + .99 + .999 + .9999 + .99999 + ...
You're nearly adding one every time. When do you want to stop? And you still have .8, .98, .998, etc. left to add to that :P

...
 
  • #24
Moo Of Doom said:
Maybe a simple way to relate that the summation of all reals between 0 and 1 is divergent is this:

Just take a whole bunch of high numbers and start adding them:
.9 + .99 + .999 + .9999 + .99999 + ...
You're nearly adding one every time. When do you want to stop? And you still have .8, .98, .998, etc. left to add to that :P

...

As has alreday been pointed out the infinite sums are only defiend on sequences whoses set fo terms is countable, but we could for example, sum all the rationals in the interals (0,1). Howvere we arranged ththsi set into a sequence of terms the sequnece of partial sums would always diverge.
 
  • #25
jcsd said:
.. .. for example, sum all the rationals in the interals (0,1). Howvere we arranged ththsi set into a sequence of terms the sequnece of partial sums would always diverge.
You have the open interval [tex] (0,1) [/tex].
I'd hate to beat up a dead horse, but can't the sum of all rationals in [tex] [0,1] [/tex] just be represented as

[tex]\mathop {\lim }\limits_{n \to \infty } \frac{1}{n}\sum\limits_{k = 0}^n k \, , \; \text{where} \; n \in \mathbb{N} [/tex]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
And so it thus diverges :blushing::
[tex]\mathop {\lim }\limits_{n \to \infty } \frac{1}{n}\sum\limits_{k = 0}^n k = \mathop {\lim }\limits_{n \to \infty } \frac{{n + 1}}{2} = \infty [/tex]

Even though you have the open interval [tex] (0,1) [/tex],
subtracting 0 or 1 from my series changes nothing; it still diverges.
 
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  • #26
The choice of (0,1) was arbitary you can indeed also have infinite sums whose set of terms are [0,1]

One such sum would be:

[tex]\sum_{n=2}^{\infty}\sum_{x=0}^{n} \frac{x}{n}[/tex]

Where the usual defitnion of a sum to infity implies (i.e. the limit of the sum as n tends to infinity).

edited to add: I see you've edited your sum, the limit is now infty, but the ste of terms isn't the rationals in the inetrval [0,1] (as what you've got there isn't a sum to infinity).
 
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  • #27
jcsd said:
edited to add: I see you've edited your sum, the limit is now infty, but the ste of terms isn't the rationals in the inetrval [0,1] (as what you've got there isn't a sum to infinity).
Indeed, now I find that to be true (after more careful reasoning), which is why, as I mentioned :shy:
bomba923 said:
I'd hate to beat up a dead horse
By the "dead horse" :shy:, I'm referring to https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=81526
:smile:
(The only difference here is the sum, which is no step up at all)
 
  • #28
I think whozum has an obligation to specify what number comes next after 0 if he/she expects any help! :)
 
  • #29
Tide said:
I think whozum has an obligation to specify what number comes next after 0 if he/she expects any help! :)

I was speaking of the numbers between 0 and 1.. are you guys just ****ing with me or what's the deal here? It was a clear cut question.
 
  • #30
Well, it isn't a clear cut question. The first thing to have asked yourself is: *how* do you try to sum all the numbers between 0 and 1. That is to say that there really was a more basic question going on. For instance it *is* possible to sum more than a simple series indexed by the natuarl nubmers.

eg, let w be a symbol and r run from 1 to infinity, then define x(w)_r to be a geometric series of positive terms that sums to 1/2, then x(2w)_r be one that sums to 1/4, then x(3w)_r be oen that sums to 1/8, and so on so that the sequence x(nw)_r sums to 1/2^n

then i claim that this is gives a series indexed by the ordinal w^2 (or something like that) whose sum which we do transfinitely is 1.

However [0,1] is uncountable. so we can't do this. So, it is perfectly reasonable to ask how you thought the sum was going to be taken.
 
  • #31
matt grime said:
Well, it isn't a clear cut question. The first thing to have asked yourself is: *how* do you try to sum all the numbers between 0 and 1. That is to say that there really was a more basic question going on. For instance it *is* possible to sum more than a simple series indexed by the natuarl nubmers.

eg, let w be a symbol and r run from 1 to infinity, then define x(w)_r to be a geometric series of positive terms that sums to 1/2, then x(2w)_r be one that sums to 1/4, then x(3w)_r be oen that sums to 1/8, and so on so that the sequence x(nw)_r sums to 1/2^n

then i claim that this is gives a series indexed by the ordinal w^2 (or something like that) whose sum which we do transfinitely is 1.

However [0,1] is uncountable. so we can't do this. So, it is perfectly reasonable to ask how you thought the sum was going to be taken.

The thought that crossed my mind, in the shower might I add, was that there are a bunch of numbers between 0 and 1, an infinite number of them. If I added them all, do they converge, and if so what do they converge to.

The simplest way to reflect that was to ask it the way I did. Arildno says that my question implies that I'm asking about integers, which is in all honesty a mockery.

It was a 5 second ordeal that was answered in the first 3 posts.
 
  • #32
Why is it a mockery? You ask a question that makes no sense, so others must attempt to make sense of it. Arildno demonstrated that the question as posted makes no sense by posting one interpretation that shows highlights the absurdity (in the non-insulting sense) of the situation.


"number" is a vague fuzzy term that could mean anything. natural nubmer, whole number, rational number, real nubmer, complex number. Only context makes it make sense, and there is no context for adding up all real numbers (or rational ones for that matter) between 0 and 1.
 

What is the concept of adding 0 to 1?

The concept of adding 0 to 1 is based on the fundamental property of addition, where adding 0 to any number results in the same number. In this case, adding 0 to 1 will result in the sum of 1.

Why is adding 0 to 1 important?

Adding 0 to 1 may seem like a simple operation, but it is crucial in mathematical calculations. It helps establish the identity element for addition, which is necessary for solving more complex equations and proving mathematical theorems.

What is the sum of 0 and 1?

The sum of 0 and 1 is 1. This is because adding 0 to any number results in the same number, and 1 is the identity element for addition.

How does adding 0 to 1 affect other numbers?

Adding 0 to 1 does not affect other numbers in an addition operation. For example, if we add 0 to 1 and then add the resulting sum to another number, the final result will be the same as if we had just added the two numbers together without adding 0 to 1 first.

What is the difference between adding 1 and adding 0 to a number?

Adding 1 to a number increases the number by 1, while adding 0 to a number does not change the number. For example, adding 1 to 5 results in 6, while adding 0 to 5 results in 5.

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