For every positive integer $s$, let $A_s$ denote the set of the sums of the converging series $\sum\limits_{n=1}^\infty\frac{a_n}{n^s}$ for every periodic sequence of integers $(a_n)$.
Then each $A_s$ is a countable dense subset of the real numbers, and an additive group. The set $A_1$ is in fact a vector space with scalars drawn from the rationals.
I suspect $A_s$ should contain no non-zero rationals (counterexamples are welcome!) but a proof of this would imply that Catalan's number is irrational so attacking that directly should be avoided...
Question Can anything interesting be said about the intersections of these sets? For example, is it the case that $A_s\cap A_t=\{0\}$ for every $s\ne t$?
This question comes from my own musings and it may be open. I suppose this is a risk one always has when asking questions that flirt with the zeta function.
Some Notes: $\zeta(s)\in A_s$, $\eta(s) \in A_s$, $\ln(\mathbb{Q})\subset A_1$.
Generalizations that may be worthy of follow up:
1) Is this just the case for positive real numbers $s\neq t$?
This has now been answered below. This is not the case.
2) If we define $A_s$ with Gaussian integers do we get the same results?
Edit 1 (an effort to spruce this question up): Some Motivations + some cool values
This question didn't get the excitement I expected so I will now add some crazy values! Here are a couple of values from Dirichlet series in $A_1$, $A_3$, $A_5$, $A_7$. We can compute specific values in $A_s$ but when we manage to get exact forms of values in these sets (it seems) invariably this is because of their relationship to Dirichlet Series.
$$f(s,\vec{a})= \sum_{n=1}^\infty{\frac{a_n}{n^s}} $$
Then $$ \begin{array}{c|c|c|c|c|c} f(s,\vec{a}) & \vec{a}=(1,-1) & \vec{a}=(1,0,-1,0) & \vec{a}=(1,1,0,-1,-1,0) & \vec{a}=(1,0,1,0,-1,0,-1,0) \\ \hline %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% s=1 & \ln(2) & \frac{\pi}{4} & \frac{2 \pi}{3\sqrt{3}} & \frac{\pi}{2\sqrt{2}} \\ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% s=3 & \frac{3}{4}\zeta(3) & \frac{\pi^3}{32} & \frac{5 \pi^3}{81\sqrt{3}} & \frac{3\pi^3}{64\sqrt{2}} \\ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% s=5 & \frac{15}{16}\zeta(5) & \frac{5 \pi^5}{1536} & \frac{17 \pi^5}{2916\sqrt{3}} & \frac{19 \pi^5}{4096 \sqrt{2}} \\ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% s=7 & \frac{63}{64}\zeta(7) & \frac{61\pi^7}{184320} & \frac{91 \pi^7}{157464\sqrt{3}} & \frac{307 \pi^7}{655360\sqrt{2}} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \end{array}$$
Column(1) Column(2) Column(3) Column(4) And more
So here are just some specific elements in $A_s$ to get a feeling for these sets.