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Decimal expansion of golden ratio phi (or tau) = (1 + sqrt(5))/2.
(Formerly M4046 N1679)
+10
1683
1, 6, 1, 8, 0, 3, 3, 9, 8, 8, 7, 4, 9, 8, 9, 4, 8, 4, 8, 2, 0, 4, 5, 8, 6, 8, 3, 4, 3, 6, 5, 6, 3, 8, 1, 1, 7, 7, 2, 0, 3, 0, 9, 1, 7, 9, 8, 0, 5, 7, 6, 2, 8, 6, 2, 1, 3, 5, 4, 4, 8, 6, 2, 2, 7, 0, 5, 2, 6, 0, 4, 6, 2, 8, 1, 8, 9, 0, 2, 4, 4, 9, 7, 0, 7, 2, 0, 7, 2, 0, 4, 1, 8, 9, 3, 9, 1, 1, 3, 7, 4, 8, 4, 7, 5
OFFSET
1,2
COMMENTS
Also decimal expansion of the positive root of (x+1)^n - x^(2n). (x+1)^n - x^(2n) = 0 has only two real roots x1 = -(sqrt(5)-1)/2 and x2 = (sqrt(5)+1)/2 for all n > 0. - Cino Hilliard, May 27 2004
The golden ratio phi is the most irrational among irrational numbers; its successive continued fraction convergents F(n+1)/F(n) are the slowest to approximate to its actual value (I. Stewart, in "Nature's Numbers", Basic Books, 1997). - Lekraj Beedassy, Jan 21 2005
Let t=golden ratio. The lesser sqrt(5)-contraction rectangle has shape t-1, and the greater sqrt(5)-contraction rectangle has shape t. For definitions of shape and contraction rectangles, see A188739. - Clark Kimberling, Apr 16 2011
The golden ratio (often denoted by phi or tau) is the shape (i.e., length/width) of the golden rectangle, which has the special property that removal of a square from one end leaves a rectangle of the same shape as the original rectangle. Analogously, removals of certain isosceles triangles characterize side-golden and angle-golden triangles. Repeated removals in these configurations result in infinite partitions of golden rectangles and triangles into squares or isosceles triangles so as to match the continued fraction, [1,1,1,1,1,...] of tau. For the special shape of rectangle which partitions into golden rectangles so as to match the continued fraction [tau, tau, tau, ...], see A188635. For other rectangular shapes which depend on tau, see A189970, A190177, A190179, A180182. For triangular shapes which depend on tau, see A152149 and A188594; for tetrahedral, see A178988. - Clark Kimberling, May 06 2011
Given a pentagon ABCDE, 1/(phi)^2 <= (A*C^2 + C*E^2 + E*B^2 + B*D^2 + D*A^2) / (A*B^2 + B*C^2 + C*D^2 + D*E^2 + E*A^2) <= (phi)^2. - Seiichi Kirikami, Aug 18 2011
If a triangle has sides whose lengths form a geometric progression in the ratio of 1:r:r^2 then the triangle inequality condition requires that r be in the range 1/phi < r < phi. - Frank M Jackson, Oct 12 2011
The graphs of x-y=1 and x*y=1 meet at (tau,1/tau). - Clark Kimberling, Oct 19 2011
Also decimal expansion of the first root of x^sqrt(x+1) = sqrt(x+1)^x. - Michel Lagneau, Dec 02 2011
Also decimal expansion of the root of (1/x)^(1/sqrt(x+1)) = (1/sqrt(x+1))^(1/x). - Michel Lagneau, Apr 17 2012
This is the case n=5 of (Gamma(1/n)/Gamma(3/n))*(Gamma((n-1)/n)/Gamma((n-3)/n)): (1+sqrt(5))/2 = (Gamma(1/5)/Gamma(3/5))*(Gamma(4/5)/Gamma(2/5)). - Bruno Berselli, Dec 14 2012
Also decimal expansion of the only number x>1 such that (x^x)^(x^x) = (x^(x^x))^x = x^((x^x)^x). - Jaroslav Krizek, Feb 01 2014
For n >= 1, round(phi^prime(n)) == 1 (mod prime(n)) and, for n >= 3, round(phi^prime(n)) == 1 (mod 2*prime(n)). - Vladimir Shevelev, Mar 21 2014
The continuous radical sqrt(1+sqrt(1+sqrt(1+...))) tends to phi. - Giovanni Zedda, Jun 22 2019
Equals sqrt(2+sqrt(2-sqrt(2+sqrt(2-...)))). - Diego Rattaggi, Apr 17 2021
Given any complex p such that real(p) > -1, phi is the only real solution of the equation z^p+z^(p+1)=z^(p+2), and the only attractor of the complex mapping z->M(z,p), where M(z,p)=(z^p+z^(p+1))^(1/(p+2)), convergent from any complex plane point. - Stanislav Sykora, Oct 14 2021
The only positive number such that its decimal part, its integral part and the number itself (x-[x], [x] and x) form a geometric progression is phi, with respectively (phi -1, 1, phi) and a ratio = phi. This is the answer to the 4th problem of the 7th Canadian Mathematical Olympiad in 1975 (see IMO link and Doob reference). - Bernard Schott, Dec 08 2021
The golden ratio is the unique number x such that f(n*x)*c(n/x) - f(n/x)*c(n*x) = n for all n >= 1, where f = floor and c = ceiling. - Clark Kimberling, Jan 04 2022
In The Second Scientific American Book Of Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, Martin Gardner wrote that, by 1910, Mark Barr (1871-1950) gave phi as a symbol for the golden ratio. - Bernard Schott, May 01 2022
Phi is the length of the equal legs of an isosceles triangle with side c = phi^2, and internal angles (A,B) = 36 degrees, C = 108 degrees. - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 20 2022
The positive solution to x^2 - x - 1 = 0. - Michal Paulovic, Jan 16 2023
REFERENCES
Michael Doob, The Canadian Mathematical Olympiad & L'Olympiade Mathématique du Canada 1969-1993 - Canadian Mathematical Society & Société Mathématique du Canada, Problem 4, 1975, pages 76-77, 1993.
Richard A. Dunlap, The Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Numbers, World Scientific, River Edge, NJ, 1997.
Steven R. Finch, Mathematical Constants, Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, Vol. 94, Cambridge University Press, 2003, Section 1.2.
Martin Gardner, The Second Scientific American Book Of Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, "Phi: The Golden Ratio", Chapter 8, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1961.
Martin Gardner, Weird Water and Fuzzy Logic: More Notes of a Fringe Watcher, "The Cult of the Golden Ratio", Chapter 9, Prometheus Books, 1996, pages 90-97.
H. E. Huntley, The Divine Proportion, Dover, NY, 1970.
Mario Livio, The Golden Ratio, Broadway Books, NY, 2002. [see the review by G. Markowsky in the links field]
Gary B. Meisner, The Golden Ratio: The Divine Beauty of Mathematics, Race Point Publishing (The Quarto Group), 2018. German translation: Der Goldene Schnitt, Librero, 2023.
Scott Olsen, The Golden Section, Walker & Co., NY, 2006.
N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence).
N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
Hans Walser, The Golden Section, Math. Assoc. of Amer. Washington DC 2001.
David Wells, The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers. Penguin Books, NY, 1986, Revised edition 1987. See pp. 36-40.
Claude-Jacques Willard, Le nombre d'or, Magnard, Paris, 1987.
LINKS
Mohammad K. Azarian, Problem 123, Missouri Journal of Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 10, No. 3 (Fall 1998), p. 176; Solution, ibid., Vol. 12, No. 1 (Winter 2000), pp. 61-62.
Murray Berg, Phi, the golden ratio (to 4599 decimal places) and Fibonacci numbers, Fib. Quart., Vol. 4, No. 2 (1961), pp. 157-162.
Ömür Deveci, Zafer Adıgüzel and Taha Doğan, On the Generalized Fibonacci-circulant-Hurwitz numbers, Notes on Number Theory and Discrete Mathematics (2020) Vol. 26, No. 1, 179-190.
T. Eveilleau, Le nombre d'or (in French).
Abdul Gaffar, Anand B. Joshi, Sonali Singh, and Keerti Srivastava, A high capacity multi-image steganography technique based on golden ratio and non-subsampled contourlet transform, Multimedia Tools and Applications (2022).
The IMO Compendium, Problem 4, 7th Canadian Mathematical Olympiad 1975.
L. B. W. Jolley, Summation of Series, Dover, 1961
Franklin H. J. Kenter, It's good to be phi: a solution to a problem of Gosper and Knuth, arXiv:1712.04856 [math.HO], 2017.
Clark Kimberling, Two kinds of golden triangles, generalized to match continued fractions, Journal for Geometry and Graphics, Vol. 11 (2007), pp. 165-171.
Clark Kimberling, Lucas Representations of Positive Integers, J. Int. Seq., Vol. 23 (2020), Article 20.9.5.
Wolfdieter Lang, A list of representative simple difference sets of the Singer type for small orders m, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (Karlsruhe, Germany 2020).
Wolfdieter Lang, Cantor's List of Real Algebraic Numbers of Heights 1 to 7, arXiv:2307.10645 [math.NT], 2023.
Simon Litsyn and Vladimir Shevelev, Irrational Factors Satisfying the Little Fermat Theorem, International Journal of Number Theory, Vol. 1, No. 4 (2005), pp. 499-512.
Gary B. Meisner, Phi, The Golden Number.
George Markowsky, Misconceptions About the Golden Ratio, College Mathematics Journal, 23:1 (January 1992), 2-19.
George Markowsky, Book review: The Golden Ratio, Notices of the AMS, 52:3 (March 2005), 344-347.
R. S. Melham and A. G. Shannon, Inverse Trigonometric Hyperbolic Summation Formulas Involving Generalized Fibonacci Numbers, The Fibonacci Quarterly, Vol. 33, No. 1 (1995), pp. 32-40.
Jean-Christophe Michel, Le nombre d'or.
J. J. O'Connor and E. F. Robertson, The Golden ratio.
Hugo Pfoertner, 1 million digits of phi, Computed using A. J. Yee's y-cruncher.
Simon Plouffe, Plouffe's Inverter, The golden ratio to 10 million digits. [Only announcement, file truncated]
Fred Richman, Fibonacci sequence with multiprecision Java, Successive approximations to phi from ratios of consecutive Fibonacci numbers.
Herman P. Robinson, The CSR Function, Popular Computing (Calabasas, CA), Vol. 4, No. 35 (Feb 1976), pages PC35-3 to PC35-4. Annotated and scanned copy.
E. F. Schubert, The Fibonacci series.
Vladimir Shevelev, A property of n-bonacci constant, Seqfan (Mar 23 2014).
Jonathan Sondow, Evaluation of Tachiya's algebraic infinite products involving Fibonacci and Lucas numbers, Diophantine Analysis and Related Fields 2011 - AIP Conference Proceedings, Vol. 1385, pp. 97-100; arXiv:1106.4246 [math.NT], 2011.
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Golden Ratio.
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Silver Ratio.
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Fibonacci n-Step Number.
Wikipedia, Mark Barr.
Wikipedia, Golden ratio.
Wikipedia, Metallic mean.
FORMULA
Equals Sum_{n>=2} 1/A064170(n) = 1/1 + 1/2 + 1/(2*5) + 1/(5*13) + 1/(13*34) + ... - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 15 2007
Equals Hypergeometric2F1([1/5, 4/5], [1/2], 3/4) = 2*cos((3/5)*arcsin(sqrt(3/4))). - Artur Jasinski, Oct 26 2008
From Hieronymus Fischer, Jan 02 2009: (Start)
The fractional part of phi^n equals phi^(-n), if n is odd. For even n, the fractional part of phi^n is equal to 1-phi^(-n).
General formula: Provided x>1 satisfies x-x^(-1)=floor(x), where x=phi for this sequence, then:
for odd n: x^n - x^(-n) = floor(x^n), hence fract(x^n) = x^(-n),
for even n: x^n + x^(-n) = ceiling(x^n), hence fract(x^n) = 1 - x^(-n),
for all n>0: x^n + (-x)^(-n) = round(x^n).
x=phi is the minimal solution to x - x^(-1) = floor(x) (where floor(x)=1 in this case).
Other examples of constants x satisfying the relation x - x^(-1) = floor(x) include A014176 (the silver ratio: where floor(x)=2) and A098316 (the "bronze" ratio: where floor(x)=3). (End)
Equals 2*cos(Pi/5) = e^(i*Pi/5) + e^(-i*Pi/5). - Eric Desbiaux, Mar 19 2010
The solutions to x-x^(-1)=floor(x) are determined by x=(1/2)*(m+sqrt(m^2+4)), m>=1; x=phi for m=1. In terms of continued fractions the solutions can be described by x=[m;m,m,m,...], where m=1 for x=phi, and m=2 for the silver ratio A014176, and m=3 for the bronze ratio A098316. - Hieronymus Fischer, Oct 20 2010
Sum_{n>=1} x^n/n^2 = Pi^2/10 - (log(2)*sin(Pi/10))^2 where x = 2*sin(Pi/10) = this constant here. [Jolley, eq 360d]
phi = 1 + Sum_{k>=1} (-1)^(k-1)/(F(k)*F(k+1)), where F(n) is the n-th Fibonacci number (A000045). Proof. By Catalan's identity, F^2(n) - F(n-1)*F(n+1) = (-1)^(n-1). Therefore,(-1)^(n-1)/(F(n)*F(n+1)) = F(n)/F(n+1) - F(n-1)/F(n). Thus Sum_{k=1..n} (-1)^(k-1)/(F(k)*F(k+1)) = F(n)/F(n+1). If n goes to infinity, this tends to 1/phi = phi - 1. - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 22 2013
phi^n = (A000032(n) + A000045(n)*sqrt(5)) / 2. - Thomas Ordowski, Jun 09 2013
Let P(q) = Product_{k>=1} (1 + q^(2*k-1)) (the g.f. of A000700), then A001622 = exp(Pi/6) * P(exp(-5*Pi)) / P(exp(-Pi)). - Stephen Beathard, Oct 06 2013
phi = i^(2/5) + i^(-2/5) = ((i^(4/5))+1) / (i^(2/5)) = 2*(i^(2/5) - (sin(Pi/5))i) = 2*(i^(-2/5) + (sin(Pi/5))i). - Jaroslav Krizek, Feb 03 2014
phi = sqrt(2/(3 - sqrt(5))) = sqrt(2)/A094883. This follows from the fact that ((1 + sqrt(5))^2)*(3 - sqrt(5)) = 8, so that ((1 + sqrt(5))/2)^2 = 2/(3 - sqrt(5)). - Geoffrey Caveney, Apr 19 2014
exp(arcsinh(cos(Pi/2-log(phi)*i))) = exp(arcsinh(sin(log(phi)*i))) = (sqrt(3) + i) / 2. - Geoffrey Caveney, Apr 23 2014
exp(arcsinh(cos(Pi/3))) = phi. - Geoffrey Caveney, Apr 23 2014
cos(Pi/3) + sqrt(1 + cos(Pi/3)^2). - Geoffrey Caveney, Apr 23 2014
2*phi = z^0 + z^1 - z^2 - z^3 + z^4, where z = exp(2*Pi*i/5). See the Wikipedia Kronecker-Weber theorem link. - Jonathan Sondow, Apr 24 2014
phi = 1/2 + sqrt(1 + (1/2)^2). - Geoffrey Caveney, Apr 25 2014
Phi is the limiting value of the iteration of x -> sqrt(1+x) on initial value a >= -1. - Chayim Lowen, Aug 30 2015
From Isaac Saffold, Feb 28 2018: (Start)
1 = Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n, k) / phi^(n+k) for all nonnegative integers n.
1 = Sum_{n>=1} 1 / phi^(2n-1).
1 = Sum_{n>=2} 1 / phi^n.
phi = Sum_{n>=1} 1/phi^n. (End)
From Christian Katzmann, Mar 19 2018: (Start)
phi = Sum_{n>=0} (15*(2*n)! + 8*n!^2)/(2*n!^2*3^(2*n+2)).
phi = 1/2 + Sum_{n>=0} 5*(2*n)!/(2*n!^2*3^(2*n+1)). (End)
phi = Product_{k>=1} (1 + 2/(-1 + 2^k*(sqrt(4+(1-2/2^k)^2) + sqrt(4+(1-1/2^k)^2)))). - Gleb Koloskov, Jul 14 2021
Equals Product_{k>=1} (Fibonacci(3*k)^2 + (-1)^(k+1))/(Fibonacci(3*k)^2 + (-1)^k) (Melham and Shannon, 1995). - Amiram Eldar, Jan 15 2022
From Michal Paulovic, Jan 16 2023: (Start)
Equals the real part of 2 * e^(i * Pi / 5).
Equals 2 * sin(3 * Pi / 10) = 2*A019863.
Equals -2 * sin(37 * Pi / 10).
Equals 1 + 1 / (1 + 1 / (1 + 1 / (1 + 1 / (1 + 1 / ...)))).
Equals (2 + 3 * (2 + 3 * (2 + 3 * ...)^(1/4))^(1/4))^(1/4).
Equals (1 + 2 * (1 + 2 * (1 + 2 * ...)^(1/3))^(1/3))^(1/3).
Equals (1 + phi + (1 + phi + (1 + phi + ...)^(1/3))^(1/3))^(1/3).
Equals 13/8 + Sum_{k=0..oo} (-1)^(k+1)*(2*k+1)!/((k+2)!*k!*4^(2*k+3)).
(End)
phi^n = phi * A000045(n) + A000045(n-1). - Gary W. Adamson, Sep 09 2023
The previous formula holds for integer n, with F(-n) = (-1)^(n+1)*F(n), for n >= 0, with F(n) = A000045(n), for n >= 0. phi^n are integers in the quadratic number field Q(sqrt(5)). - Wolfdieter Lang, Sep 16 2023
Equals Product_{k>=0} ((5*k + 2)*(5*k + 3))/((5*k + 1)*(5*k + 4)). - Antonio Graciá Llorente, Feb 24 2024
From Antonio Graciá Llorente, Apr 21 2024: (Start)
Equals Product_{k>=1} phi^(-2^k) + 1, with phi = A001622.
Equals Product_{k>=0} ((5^(k+1) + 1)*(5^(k-1/2) + 1))/((5^k + 1)*(5^(k+1/2) + 1)).
Equals Product_{k>=1} 1 - (4*(-1)^k)/(10*k - 5 + (-1)^k) = Product_{k>=1} A047221(k)/A047209(k).
Equals Product_{k>=0} ((5*k + 7)*(5*k + 1 + (-1)^k))/((5*k + 1)*(5*k + 7 + (-1)^k)).
Equals Product_{k>=0} ((10*k + 3)*(10*k + 5)*(10*k + 8)^2)/((10*k + 2)*(10*k + 4)*(10*k + 9)^2).
Equals Product_{k>=5} 1 + 1/(Fibonacci(k) - (-1)^k).
Equals Product_{k>=2} 1 + 1/Fibonacci(2*k).
Equals Product_{k>=2} (Lucas(k)^2 + (-1)^k)/(Lucas(k)^2 - 4*(-1)^k). (End)
Equals Product_{k>=1} (1-2/(Fibonacci(3*k)^2 + 1))^((-1)^(k)). - Antonio Graciá Llorente, Sep 15 2024
EXAMPLE
1.6180339887498948482045868343656381177203091798057628621...
MAPLE
Digits:=1000; evalf((1+sqrt(5))/2); # Wesley Ivan Hurt, Nov 01 2013
MATHEMATICA
RealDigits[(1 + Sqrt[5])/2, 10, 130] (* Stefan Steinerberger, Apr 02 2006 *)
RealDigits[ Exp[ ArcSinh[1/2]], 10, 111][[1]] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Mar 01 2008 *)
RealDigits[GoldenRatio, 10, 120][[1]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Oct 28 2015 *)
PROG
(PARI) default(realprecision, 20080); x=(1+sqrt(5))/2; for (n=1, 20000, d=floor(x); x=(x-d)*10; write("b001622.txt", n, " ", d)); \\ Harry J. Smith, Apr 19 2009
(PARI)
/* Digit-by-digit method: write it as 0.5+sqrt(1.25) and start at hundredths digit */
r=11; x=400; print(1); print(6);
for(dig=1, 110, {d=0; while((20*r+d)*d <= x, d++);
d--; /* while loop overshoots correct digit */
print(d); x=100*(x-(20*r+d)*d); r=10*r+d})
\\ Michael B. Porter, Oct 24 2009
(PARI)
a(n) = floor(10^(n-1)*(quadgen(5))%10);
alist(len) = digits(floor(quadgen(5)*10^(len-1))); \\ Chittaranjan Pardeshi, Jun 22 2022
(Python)
from sympy import S
def alst(n): # truncate extra last digit to avoid rounding
return list(map(int, str(S.GoldenRatio.n(n+1)).replace(".", "")))[:-1]
print(alst(105)) # Michael S. Branicky, Jan 06 2021
CROSSREFS
KEYWORD
nonn,cons,nice,easy
EXTENSIONS
Additional links contributed by Lekraj Beedassy, Dec 23 2003
More terms from Gabriel Cunningham (gcasey(AT)mit.edu), Oct 24 2004
More terms from Stefan Steinerberger, Apr 02 2006
Broken URL to Project Gutenberg replaced by Georg Fischer, Jan 03 2009
Edited by M. F. Hasler, Feb 24 2014
STATUS
approved
Decimal expansion of the solution to (1 + x)*x^(1 - x) = x^x.
+10
2
3, 5, 4, 0, 4, 5, 7, 8, 7, 9, 6, 1, 7, 5, 8, 3, 4, 8, 0, 7, 7, 7, 9, 6, 1, 7, 3, 7, 9, 5, 6, 4, 3, 6, 4, 3, 7, 9, 6, 5, 7, 7, 7, 2, 2, 9, 5, 9, 7, 2, 7, 2, 5, 8, 9, 1, 7, 6, 3, 5, 6, 6, 7, 4, 5, 2, 6, 7, 5, 7, 0, 2, 6, 1, 2, 6, 5, 3, 5, 5, 4, 6, 2, 4, 1, 3, 2, 6, 7, 5, 5, 8, 2, 2, 5, 6, 3, 6
OFFSET
0,1
EXAMPLE
0.3540457879617583480777961737956436437965777229597272589...
MATHEMATICA
RealDigits[x /. FindRoot[(1 + x)*x^(1 - x) == x^x, {x, 1/2}, WorkingPrecision -> 100]][[1]] (* Vaclav Kotesovec, Apr 29 2018 *)
PROG
(PARI) solve(x=1/3, 1, (1 + x)*x^(1 - x) - x^x) \\ Michel Marcus, Apr 18 2018
CROSSREFS
Cf. A302973.
KEYWORD
nonn,cons
AUTHOR
EXTENSIONS
More terms from Michel Marcus, Apr 18 2018
STATUS
approved
Decimal expansion of the solution to (1 - x)*(1 + x)^x = x^x.
+10
1
3, 9, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 0, 8, 4, 5, 4, 3, 4, 2, 7, 6, 8, 3, 4, 8, 1, 9, 8, 4, 8, 1, 6, 6, 0, 2, 4, 0, 5, 4, 3, 5, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 9, 1, 9, 5, 3, 3, 7, 9, 9, 0, 5, 4, 8, 0, 5, 1, 8, 0, 3, 5, 1, 8, 1, 7, 2, 8, 5, 7, 0, 7, 7, 5, 6, 4, 1, 4, 4, 6, 5, 6, 1, 7, 1, 0, 7, 9, 0, 2, 8, 6, 7, 7, 0, 3, 6, 7, 1, 5, 4, 9, 6, 7, 2, 5, 8
OFFSET
0,1
EXAMPLE
0.3912468084543427683481984816602405435...
MATHEMATICA
Take[RealDigits[x /. FindRoot[(1 - x)*(1 + x)^x == x^x, {x, 1/2}, WorkingPrecision -> 120], 10][[1]], 105]
PROG
(PARI) solve(x=1/3, 1, (1 - x)*(1 + x)^x - x^x) \\ Michel Marcus, May 04 2018
CROSSREFS
KEYWORD
nonn,cons
AUTHOR
EXTENSIONS
More digits from Alois P. Heinz, May 04 2018
STATUS
approved

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