Reciprocal Fibonacci constant

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Template:Short description The reciprocal Fibonacci constant Template:Mvar is the sum of the reciprocals of the Fibonacci numbers:

ψ=k=11Fk=11+11+12+13+15+18+113+121+.

Because the ratio of successive terms tends to the reciprocal of the golden ratio, which is less than 1, the ratio test shows that the sum converges.

The value of Template:Mvar is approximately

ψ=3.359885666243177553172011302918927179688905133732 Template:OEIS.

With Template:Mvar terms, the series gives Template:Math digits of accuracy. Bill Gosper derived an accelerated series which provides Template:Math digits.[1] Template:Mvar is irrational, as was conjectured by Paul Erdős, Ronald Graham, and Leonard Carlitz, and proved in 1989 by Richard André-Jeannin.[2]

Its simple continued fraction representation is:

ψ=[3;2,1,3,1,1,13,2,3,3,2,1,1,6,3,2,4,362,2,4,8,6,30,50,1,6,3,3,2,7,2,3,1,3,2,] Template:OEIS.

In analogy to the Riemann zeta function, define the Fibonacci zeta function as ζF(s)=n=11(Fn)s=11s+11s+12s+13s+15s+18s+ for complex number Template:Mvar with Template:Math, and its analytic continuation elsewhere. Particularly the given function equals Template:Mvar when Template:Math.[3]

It was shown that:

See also

References


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