Most formally, a perfect number is a natural number n for which σ(n) = 2n. The σ function (lowercase sigma, for those without σ in their browser's character set) returns the sum of the aliquot parts of a number, aka the sum of all the number's divisors (all divisors, not just the proper ones). If σ(n) < 2n, then n is called deficient. If σ(n) > 2n, then n is called abundant.

There has been some interest lately in finding "multiple perfect numbers," numbers for which σ(n) = kn, for integers k greater than 2. The human race has yet to discover a multiple perfect number with k = 11, although many have been discovered for k = 10.