, of the perfection of the number 6 For any integer
M, as Ore observed, the product of the harmonic mean and
arithmetic mean of its divisors equals
M itself, as can be seen from the definitions. Therefore,
M is harmonic, with harmonic mean of divisors
k,
if and only if the average of its divisors is the product of
M with a
unit fraction 1/
k. Ore showed that every
perfect number is harmonic. To see this, observe that the sum of the divisors of a perfect number
M is exactly
2M; therefore, the average of the divisors is
M(2/τ(
M)), where τ(
M) denotes the
number of divisors of
M. For any
M, τ(
M) is
odd if and only if
M is a
square number, for otherwise each divisor
d of
M can be paired with a different divisor
M/
d. But no perfect number can be a square: this follows from the
known form of even perfect numbers and from the fact that odd perfect numbers (if they exist) must have a factor of the form
qα where α ≡ 1 (
mod 4). Therefore, for a perfect number
M, τ(
M) is even and the average of the divisors is the product of
M with the unit fraction 2/τ(
M); thus,
M is a harmonic divisor number. Ore
conjectured that no odd harmonic divisor numbers exist other than 1. If the conjecture is true, this would imply the nonexistence of
odd perfect numbers. == Bounds and computer searches ==