I Why Is There No Simple Formula for the Sum of a Harmonic Progression?

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    Harmonic Sum
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The discussion centers on the absence of a simple formula for the sum of a harmonic progression (HP). It is noted that, except for trivial cases, HP sums cannot yield integers due to the presence of denominators divisible by unique prime numbers. Participants reference a Wikipedia explanation and external resources that delve into the mathematical complexities behind this phenomenon. A formula exists involving the polygamma function, but it is not straightforward or particularly useful for practical calculations. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the challenges in deriving a concise formula for the sum of HP terms.
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Do you mean the phrase:

It is not possible for a harmonic progression (other than the trivial case where a = 1 and k = 0) to sum to an integer. The reason is that, necessarily, at least one denominator of the progression will be divisible by a prime number that does not divide any other denominator.[1]
 
jedishrfu said:
Do you mean the phrase:
Yes
 
I think this video makes every thing clearer, thanks jedishrfu
 
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Still i don't have any clue/answer for why there is no formula for sum of HP for n terms, and i am not able to open your link
 
Are you asking why there is not a smart formula for the exact sum with k from 0 to n ? The wiki page speaks mainly of integer sum and the clever video of divergence and infinite sum, which are another things.
 
As n grows large, you have \sum_{k=1}^{n}\frac{1}{k}\approx \ln(n)+\gamma.
 
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there is a nice but not very useful formula :
\sum_{k=1}^{n}{\frac{1}{{a}+{b k}}}=\frac{{\psi^{(0)}({{\frac{a}{b}}+{n}}+{1})}-{\psi^{(0)}({\frac{a}{b}}+{1})}}{b} where \psi^{(n)}(u) is the polygamma function
 
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Igael said:
Are you asking why there is not a smart formula for the exact sum with k from 0 to n ?
Yes
 
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