Addition
For a definition of addition in the natural numbers, see Addition in N.
See also: counting
| Table of contents |
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2 Notation 3 Relationships to other operations and constants 4 Useful sums 5 Approximation by integrals 6 In music 7 See also 8 External links |
Important properties
When adding finitely many numbers, it doesn't matter how you group the numbers and in which order you add them; you will always get the same result. (See Associativity and Commutativity.) If you add zero to any number, the quantity won't change; zero is the identity element for addition. The sum of any number and its additive inverse (in contexts where such a thing exists) is zero.: )
Notation
If the terms are all written out individually, then addition is written using the plus sign ("+"). Thus, the sum of 1, 2, and 4 is 1 + 2 + 4 = 7. If the terms are not written out individually, then the sum may be written with an ellipsis to mark out the missing terms. Thus, the sum of all the natural numbers from 1 to 100 is 1 + 2 + … + 99 + 100.
Alternatively, the sum can be represented by the summation symbol, which is the capital Sigma. This is defined as:
One often sees generalizations of this notation in which an arbitrary logical condition is supplied, and the sum is intended to be taken over all values satisfying the condition. For example:
Relationships to other operations and constants
It's possible to add fewer than 2 numbers:
- If you add the single term x, then the sum is x.
- If you add zero terms, then the sum is zero, because zero is the identity for addition. This is known as the empty sum.
Many other operations can be thought of as generalised sums. If a single term x appears in a sum n times, then the sum is nx, the result of a multiplication. If n is not a natural number, then the multiplication may still make sense, so that we have a sort of notion of adding a term, say, two and a half times.
A special case is multiplication by -1, which leads to the concept of the additive inverse, and to subtraction, the inverse operation to addition.
The most general version of these ideas is the linear combination, where any number of terms are included in the generalised sum any number of times.
Useful sums
The following are useful identities:
-

(see arithmetic series);
-
-
-
-
(see geometric series);
-
(special case of the above where
)
-
(special case of the above,
and
);
-

(see binomial coefficient); -
-
-

is the kth Bernoulli number.The following are useful approximations (using theta notation):
-

for every real constant c greater than -1; -
-

for every real constant c greater than 1; -

for every nonnegative real constant c; -

for all nonnegative real constants c and d; -

for all nonnegative real constants b > 1, c, d.
Approximation by integrals
Many such approximations can be obtained by the following connection between sums and integrals, which holds for any increasing function f:
In music
Sums are also used in musical set theory. George Perle provides the following example:- "C-E, D-F♯, E♭-G, are different instances of the same interval… the other kind of identity… has to do with axes of symmetry. C-E belongs to a family of symmetrically related dyadss as follows:"
| D | D♯ | E | F | F♯ | G | G♯ | ||||||
| D | C♯ | C | B | A♯ | A | G♯ |
- Axis pitches italicized, the axis is pitch class determined.
- Axis pitches italicized, the axis is pitch class determined.
The tone row to Alban Berg's Lyric Suite,
, is a series of six dyads, all sum 11. If the row is rotated and retograded, so it runs
, the dyads are all sum 6.
| C | G | D | D♯ | A♯ | E♯ | |||||
| B | E | A | G♯ | C♯ | F♯ |
- Axis pitches italicized, the axis is dyad (interval 1) determined
- Axis pitches italicized, the axis is dyad (interval 1) determined
See also
- Incrementation
- Plus and minus signs
- Equals sign
- Modular arithmetic
- Elementary arithmetic
External links
- Addition
- {} on PlanetMath.
- Addition on a Japanese abacus selected from Abacus: Mystery of the Bead
