Cahen's constant

In mathematics, Cahen's constant is defined as an infinite series of unit fractions, with alternating signs, derived from Sylvester's sequence:

Combining these fractions in pairs leads to an alternative expansion of Cahen's constant as a series of positive unit fractions formed from the terms in even positions of Sylvester's sequence. This series for Cahen's constant forms its greedy Egyptian expansion:

This constant is named after Eugène Cahen (also known for the Cahen-Mellin integral), who first formulated and investigated its series (Cahen 1891).

Cahen's constant is known to be transcendental (Davison & Shallit 1991). It is notable as being one of a small number of naturally occurring transcendental numbers for which we know the complete continued fraction expansion: if we form the sequence

1, 1, 2, 3, 14, 129, 25298, 420984147, ... (sequence A006279 in the OEIS)

defined by the recurrence relation

then the continued fraction expansion of Cahen's constant is

(Davison & Shallit 1991).

References

  • Cahen, Eugène (1891), "Note sur un développement des quantités numériques, qui présente quelque analogie avec celui en fractions continues", Nouvelles Annales de Mathématiques, 10: 508–514
  • Davison, J. Les; Shallit, Jeffrey O. (1991), "Continued fractions for some alternating series", Monatshefte für Mathematik, 111 (2): 119–126, doi:10.1007/BF01332350
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Cahen's Constant". MathWorld.
  • "The Cahen constant to 4000 digits", Plouffe's Inverter, Université du Québec à Montréal, archived from the original on March 17, 2011, retrieved 2011-03-19
  • "Cahen's constant (1,000,000 digits)", Darkside communication group (in Japan), retrieved 2017-12-25
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