The sum of all natural numbers 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + · · · is a divergent series. The nth partial sum of the series is the triangular number
which increases without bound as n goes to infinity.
Although the full series may seem at first sight not to have any meaningful value, it can be manipulated to yield a number of mathematically interesting results, some of which have applications in other fields such as complex analysis, quantum field theory and string theory. For example, zeta function regularization gives the result
Furthermore, the sum is always an even perfect number if and only if n = 2p-1 is a Mersenne prime, in which case p is a prime number.
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Unlike its alternating counterpart 1 − 2 + 3 − 4 + · · ·, the series 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + · · · is not Abel summable. Its generating function
has a pole at x = 1.
The series can be summed by zeta function regularization. When the real part of s is greater than 1, the Riemann zeta function of s equals the sum . This sum diverges when the real part of s is less than or equal to 1, but when s = −1 then the analytic continuation of ζ(s) gives ζ(−1) as −1/12.
The Ramanujan sum of 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + · · · is also −1/12.[1] In Srinivasa Ramanujan's second letter to G. H. Hardy, dated 27 February 1913, he wrote:
In bosonic string theory, the attempt is to compute the possible energy levels of a string, in particularly the lowest energy level. Speaking informally, each harmonic of the string can be viewed as a collection of independent quantum harmonic oscillators, where is the dimension of spacetime. If the fundamental oscillation frequency is then the energy in an oscillator contributing to the th harmonic is . So using the divergent series, the sum over all harmonics is . Ultimately it is this fact, combined with the no-ghost theorem, which leads to bosonic string theory failing to be consistent in dimensions other than 26.
A similar calculation is involved in computing the Casimir force.