Almost all hyperharmonic numbers are not integers
DOI10.1016/J.JNT.2016.07.023zbMATH Open1396.11050OpenAlexW2509653361WikidataQ114157406 ScholiaQ114157406MaRDI QIDQ331145FDOQ331145
Authors: Haydar Göral, Doğa Can Sertbaş
Publication date: 26 October 2016
Published in: Journal of Number Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnt.2016.07.023
Recommendations
Factorials, binomial coefficients, combinatorial functions (05A10) Other combinatorial number theory (11B75) Special sequences and polynomials (11B83)
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Cited In (15)
- Resolution of a conjecture on the convexity of zeta functions
- Hyperharmonic integers exist
- A congruence for some generalized harmonic type sums
- The difference of hyperharmonic numbers via geometric and analytic methods
- Euler sums and non-integerness of harmonic type sums
- Applications of class numbers and Bernoulli numbers to harmonic type sums
- On the \(p\)-adic valuation of generalized harmonic numbers
- Evaluation of Euler-like sums via Hurwitz zeta values
- Are the hyperharmonics integral? A partial answer via the small intervals containing primes
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Harmonic number identities via polynomials with \(r\)-Lah coefficients
- Divisibility properties of hyperharmonic numbers
- Theory and computation of Euler sums of generalized hyperharmonic numbers
- About the non-integer property of hyperharmonic numbers
- Non-integerness of class of hyperharmonic numbers
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