Heptagonal number explained
A heptagonal number is a figurate number that is constructed by combining heptagons with ascending size. The n-th heptagonal number is given by the formula
.The first few heptagonal numbers are:
0, 1, 7, 18, 34, 55, 81, 112, 148, 189, 235, 286, 342, 403, 469, 540, 616, 697, 783, 874, 970, 1071, 1177, 1288, 1404, 1525, 1651, 1782, …
Parity
The parity of heptagonal numbers follows the pattern odd-odd-even-even. Like square numbers, the digital root in base 10 of a heptagonal number can only be 1, 4, 7 or 9. Five times a heptagonal number, plus 1 equals a triangular number.
Additional properties
- The heptagonal numbers have several notable formulas:
Sum of reciprocals
A formula for the sum of the reciprocals of the heptagonal numbers is given by:[1]
| infty |
\begin{align}\sum | |
| n=1 |
&=
| 1 | {\pi}{\sqrt{25-10\sqrt{5}}}+ |
15 |
| {1 | \sqrt{10-2\sqrt{5}}\right)+ |
|
| {1 | \sqrt{10+2\sqrt{5}}\right)\\
&= |
|
| 13\left( | \pi | \sqrt[4]{5\phi6 |
|
|
}+\frac52\ln(5) -\sqrt5 \ln(\phi)\right)\\&=1.3227792531223888567\dots\end
.
Heptagonal roots
In analogy to the square root of x, one can calculate the heptagonal root of x, meaning the number of terms in the sequence up to and including x.
The heptagonal root of x is given by the formula
which is obtained by using the quadratic formula to solve
for its unique positive root
n.
References
- Web site: Beyond the Basel Problem: Sums of Reciprocals of Figurate Numbers . 2010-05-19 . 2013-05-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130529032918/http://www.math.psu.edu/sellersj/downey_ong_sellers_cmj_preprint.pdf . dead .