MRB constant

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First 100 partial sums of (1)k(k1/k1)

The MRB constant is a mathematical constant, with decimal expansion Template:Nowrap Template:OEIS. The constant is named after its discoverer, Marvin Ray Burns, who published his discovery of the constant in 1999.[1] Burns had initially called the constant "rc" for root constant[2] but, at Simon Plouffe's suggestion, the constant was renamed the 'Marvin Ray Burns's Constant', or "MRB constant".[3]

The MRB constant is defined as the upper limit of the partial sums[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

sn=k=1n(1)kk1/k

As n grows to infinity, the sums have upper and lower limit points of −0.812140… and 0.187859…, separated by an interval of length 1. The constant can also be explicitly defined by the following infinite sums:[4]

0.187859=k=1(1)k(k1/k1)=k=1((2k)1/(2k)(2k1)1/(2k1)).

The constant relates to the divergent series:

k=1(1)kk1/k.

There is no known closed-form expression of the MRB constant,[11] nor is it known whether the MRB constant is algebraic, transcendental or even irrational.

References

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