1911 Posted June 21, 2017 Posted June 21, 2017 I've been fooling around with the Gregory series: [latex]\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} \frac {(-1)^{k+1}}{2k-1}[/latex] and brought it into the following form (since the series converges, I believe I can partition the Sum as I wish, I think. At least when I simulate it for [latex] n = 10^7[/latex] terms it still converges towards [latex]\frac {\pi}{4}[/latex]). [latex]\frac{1}{2}\sum _{k=1}^n\frac{1}{\left(16k^2-16k+3\right)}[/latex] Which sorta reminds me of the Geometric series, though it is quite different. My question is if the series of the following form is always transcendental: [latex]\frac{1}{2}\sum _{k=1}^n\frac{1}{\left(16k^2-16k+w\right)}[/latex] where [latex]w \in \mathbb{N}[/latex] besides for [latex] w = 3 [/latex]
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