A mathematical constant is a number whose value is fixed by an unambiguous definition, often referred to by a special symbol (e.g., an alphabet letter), or by mathematicians' names to facilitate using it across multiple mathematical problems. Constants arise in many areas of mathematics, with constants such as e and π occurring in such diverse contexts as geometry, number theory, statistics, and calculus.
Some constants arise naturally by a fundamental principle or intrinsic property, such as the ratio between the circumference and diameter of a circle (π). Other constants are notable more for historical reasons than for their mathematical properties. The more popular constants have been studied throughout the ages and computed to many decimal places.
All named mathematical constants are definable numbers, and usually are also computable numbers (Chaitin's constant being a significant exception).
Basic mathematical constants
These are constants which one is likely to encounter during pre-college education in many countries.
Pythagoras' constant √2
The square root of 2, often known as root 2 or Pythagoras' constant, and written as √2, is the unique positive real number that, when multiplied by itself, gives the number 2. It is more precisely called the principal square root of 2, to distinguish it from the negative number with the same property.
Geometrically the square root of 2 is the length of a diagonal across a square with sides of one unit of length; this follows from the Pythagorean theorem. It is an irrational number, possibly the first number to be known as such, and an algebraic number. Its numerical value truncated to 50 decimal places is:
- 1.41421356237309504880168872420969807856967187537694... (sequence A002193 in the OEIS).
Alternatively, the quick approximation 99/70 (≈ 1.41429) for the square root of two was frequently used before the common use of electronic calculators and computers. Despite having a denominator of only 70, it differs from the correct value by less than 1/10,000 (approx. 7.2 × 10−5).
Its simple continued fraction is periodic and given by:
Archimedes' constant π
The constant π (pi) has a natural definition in Euclidean geometry as the ratio between the circumference and diameter of a circle. It may be found in many other places in mathematics: for example, the Gaussian integral, the complex roots of unity, and Cauchy distributions in probability. However, its ubiquity is not limited to pure mathematics. It appears in many formulas in physics, and several physical constants are most naturally defined with π or its reciprocal factored out. For example, the ground state wave function of the hydrogen atom is
where is the Bohr radius.
π is an irrational number, transcendental number and an algebraic period.
The numeric value of π is approximately:
- 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510... (sequence A000796 in the OEIS).
Unusually good approximations are given by the fractions 22/7 and 355/113.
Memorizing as well as computing increasingly more digits of π is a world record pursuit.
Euler's number e
Euler's number e, also known as the exponential growth constant, appears in many areas of mathematics, and one possible definition of it is the value of the following expression:
The constant e is intrinsically related to the exponential function .
The Swiss mathematician Jacob Bernoulli discovered that e arises in compound interest: If an account starts at $1, and yields interest at annual rate R, then as the number of compounding periods per year tends to infinity (a situation known as continuous compounding), the amount of money at the end of the year will approach eR dollars.
The constant e also has applications to probability theory, where it arises in a way not obviously related to exponential growth. As an example, suppose that a slot machine with a one in n probability of winning is played n times, then for large n (e.g., one million), the probability that nothing will be won will tend to 1/e as n tends to infinity.
Another application of e, discovered in part by Jacob Bernoulli along with French mathematician Pierre Raymond de Montmort, is in the problem of derangements, also known as the hat check problem. Here, n guests are invited to a party, and at the door each guest checks his hat with the butler, who then places them into labelled boxes. The butler does not know the name of the guests, and hence must put them into boxes selected at random. The problem of de Montmort is: what is the probability that none of the hats gets put into the right box. The answer is
which, as n tends to infinity, approaches 1/e.
e is an irrational number and a transcendental number.
The numeric value of e is approximately:
- 2.71828182845904523536028747135266249775724709369995... (sequence A001113 in the OEIS).
The imaginary unit i
The imaginary unit or unit imaginary number, denoted as i, is a mathematical concept which extends the real number system to the complex number system The imaginary unit's core property is that i2 = −1. The term "imaginary" was coined because there is no (real) number having a negative square.
There are in fact two complex square roots of −1, namely i and −i, just as there are two complex square roots of every other real number (except zero, which has one double square root).
In contexts where the symbol i is ambiguous or problematic, j or the Greek iota (ι) is sometimes used. This is in particular the case in electrical engineering and control systems engineering, where the imaginary unit is often denoted by j, because i is commonly used to denote electric current.
The golden ratio φ
The number φ, also called the golden ratio, turns up frequently in geometry, particularly in figures with pentagonal symmetry. Indeed, the length of a regular pentagon's diagonal is φ times its side. The vertices of a regular icosahedron are those of three mutually orthogonal golden rectangles. Also, it is related to the Fibonacci sequence, related to growth by recursion.Kepler proved that it is the limit of the ratio of consecutive Fibonacci numbers. The golden ratio has the slowest convergence of any irrational number. It is, for that reason, one of the worst cases of Lagrange's approximation theorem and it is an extremal case of the Hurwitz inequality for diophantine approximations. This may be why angles close to the golden ratio often show up in phyllotaxis (the growth of plants). It is approximately equal to:
- 1.61803398874989484820458683436563811772030917980576... (sequence A001622 in the OEIS).
or, more precisely
Constants in advanced mathematics
These are constants which are encountered frequently in higher mathematics.
The Euler–Mascheroni constant γ
Euler's constant or the Euler–Mascheroni constant is defined as the limiting difference between the harmonic series and the natural logarithm:
It appears frequently in mathematics, especially in number theoretical contexts such as Mertens' third theorem or the growth rate of the divisor function. It has relations to the gamma function and its derivatives as well as the zeta function and there exist many different integrals and series involving .
Despite the ubiquity of the Euler-Mascheroni constant, many of its properties remain unknown. That includes the major open questions of whether it is a rational or irrational number and whether it is algebraic or transcendental. In fact, has been described as a mathematical constant "shadowed only and in importance."
The numeric value of is approximately:
- 0.57721566490153286060651209008240243104215933593992... (sequence A001620 in the OEIS).
Apéry's constant ζ(3)
Apery's constant is defined as the sum of the reciprocals of the cubes of the natural numbers:It is the special value of the Riemann zeta function at . The quest to find an exact value for this constant in terms of other known constants and elementary functions originated when Euler famously solved the Basel problem by giving . To date no such value has been found and it is conjectured that there is none. However, there exist many representations of in terms of infinite series.
Apéry's constant arises naturally in a number of physical problems, including in the second- and third-order terms of the electron's gyromagnetic ratio, computed using quantum electrodynamics.
is known to be an irrational number which was proven by the French mathematician Roger Apéry in 1979. It is however not known whether it is algebraic or transcendental.
The numeric value of Apéry's constant is approximately:
- 1.20205690315959428539973816151144999076498629234049... (sequence A002117 in the OEIS).
Catalan's constant G
Catalan's constant is defined by the alternating sum of the reciprocals of the odd square numbers:
It is the special value of the Dirichlet beta function at . Catalan's constant appears frequently in combinatorics and number theory and also outside mathematics such as in the calculation of the mass distribution of spiral galaxies.
Questions about the arithmetic nature of this constant also remain unanswered, having been called "arguably the most basic constant whose irrationality and transcendence (though strongly suspected) remain unproven." There exist many integral and series representations of Catalan's constant.
It is named after the French and Belgian mathematician Charles Eugène Catalan.
The numeric value of is approximately:
- 0.91596559417721901505460351493238411077414937428167... (sequence A006752 in the OEIS).
The Feigenbaum constants α and δ
Iterations of continuous maps serve as the simplest examples of models for dynamical systems. Named after mathematical physicist Mitchell Feigenbaum, the two Feigenbaum constants appear in such iterative processes: they are mathematical invariants of logistic maps with quadratic maximum points and their bifurcation diagrams. Specifically, the constant α is the ratio between the width of a tine and the width of one of its two subtines, and the constant δ is the limiting ratio of each bifurcation interval to the next between every period-doubling bifurcation.
The logistic map is a polynomial mapping, often cited as an archetypal example of how chaotic behaviour can arise from very simple non-linear dynamical equations. The map was popularized in a seminal 1976 paper by the Australian biologist Robert May, in part as a discrete-time demographic model analogous to the logistic equation first created by Pierre François Verhulst. The difference equation is intended to capture the two effects of reproduction and starvation.
The Feigenbaum constants in bifurcation theory are analogous to π in geometry and e in calculus. Neither of them is known to be irrational or even transcendental. However proofs of their universality exist.
The respective approximate numeric values of δ and α are:
- 4.66920160910299067185320382046620161725818557747576... (sequence A006890 in the OEIS).
- 2.50290787509589282228390287321821578638127137672714... (sequence A006891 in the OEIS).
Mathematical curiosities
Simple representatives of sets of numbers
Some constants, such as the square root of 2, Liouville's constant and Champernowne constant:
are not important mathematical invariants but retain interest being simple representatives of special sets of numbers, the irrational numbers, the transcendental numbers and the normal numbers (in base 10) respectively. The discovery of the irrational numbers is usually attributed to the Pythagorean Hippasus of Metapontum who proved, most likely geometrically, the irrationality of the square root of 2. As for Liouville's constant, named after French mathematician Joseph Liouville, it was the first number to be proven transcendental.
Chaitin's constant Ω
In the computer science subfield of algorithmic information theory, Chaitin's constant is the real number representing the probability that a randomly chosen Turing machine will halt, formed from a construction due to Argentine-American mathematician and computer scientist Gregory Chaitin. Chaitin's constant, though not being computable, has been proven to be transcendental and normal. Chaitin's constant is not universal, depending heavily on the numerical encoding used for Turing machines; however, its interesting properties are independent of the encoding.
Notation
Representing constants
It is common to express the numerical value of a constant by giving its decimal representation (or just the first few digits of it). For two reasons this representation may cause problems. First, even though rational numbers all have a finite or ever-repeating decimal expansion, irrational numbers don't have such an expression making them impossible to completely describe in this manner. Also, the decimal expansion of a number is not necessarily unique. For example, the two representations 0.999... and 1 are equivalent in the sense that they represent the same number.
Calculating digits of the decimal expansion of constants has been a common enterprise for many centuries. For example, German mathematician Ludolph van Ceulen of the 16th century spent a major part of his life calculating the first 35 digits of pi. Using computers and supercomputers, some of the mathematical constants, including π, e, and the square root of 2, have been computed to more than one hundred billion digits. Fast algorithms have been developed, some of which — as for Apéry's constant — are unexpectedly fast.
Some constants differ so much from the usual kind that a new notation has been invented to represent them reasonably. Graham's number illustrates this as Knuth's up-arrow notation is used.
It may be of interest to represent them using continued fractions to perform various studies, including statistical analysis. Many mathematical constants have an analytic form, that is they can be constructed using well-known operations that lend themselves readily to calculation. Not all constants have known analytic forms, though; Grossman's constant and Foias' constant are examples.
Symbolizing and naming of constants
Symbolizing constants with letters is a frequent means of making the notation more concise. A common convention, instigated by René Descartes in the 17th century and Leonhard Euler in the 18th century, is to use lower case letters from the beginning of the Latin alphabet or the Greek alphabet when dealing with constants in general.
However, for more important constants, the symbols may be more complex and have an extra letter, an asterisk, a number, a lemniscate or use different alphabets such as Hebrew, Cyrillic or Gothic.
Embree–Trefethen constant
Brun's constant for twin prime
Champernowne constants
cardinal number aleph naught
Sometimes, the symbol representing a constant is a whole word. For example, American mathematician Edward Kasner's 9-year-old nephew coined the names googol and googolplex.
Other names are either related to the meaning of the constant (universal parabolic constant, twin prime constant, ...) or to a specific person (Sierpiński's constant, Josephson constant, and so on).
Selected mathematical constants
Symbol | Value | Name | Rational | Algebraic | Period | Field | Known digits | First described |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.0000000000... | Zero | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Gen | all | c. 500 BC | |
1.0000000000... | One | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Gen | all | Prehistory | |
0 + 1i | Imaginary unit | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | Gen, Ana | all | 1500s | |
3.1415926535... | Pi, Archimedes' constant | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ | Gen, Ana | 2.0 × 1014 | c. 2600 BC | |
2.7182818284... | e, Euler's number | ✗ | ✗ | ? | Gen, Ana | 3.5 × 1013 | 1618 | |
1.4142135623... | Square root of 2, Pythagoras' constant | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | Gen | 2.0 × 1013 | c. 800 BC | |
1.7320508075... | Square root of 3, Theodorus' constant | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | Gen | 3.1 × 1012 | c. 800 BC | |
1.6180339887... | Golden ratio | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | Gen | 2.0 × 1013 | c. 200 BC | |
1.2599210498... | Cube root of two | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | Gen | 1.0 × 1012 | c. 380 BC | |
0.6931471805... | Natural logarithm of 2 | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ | Gen, Ana | 3.0 × 1012 | 1619 | |
0.5772156649... | Euler–Mascheroni constant | ? | ? | ? | Gen, NuT | 1.3 × 1012 | 1735 | |
1.2020569031... | Apéry's constant | ✗ | ? | ✓ | Ana | 2.0 × 1012 | 1780 | |
0.9159655941... | Catalan's constant | ? | ? | ✓ | Com | 1.2 × 1012 | 1832 | |
2.6220575542... | Lemniscate constant | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ | Ana | 1.2 × 1012 | 1700s | |
1.2824271291... | Glaisher–Kinkelin constant | ? | ? | ? | Ana | 5.0 × 105 | 1860 | |
2.6854520010... | Khinchin's constant | ? | ? | ? | NuT | 1.1 × 105 | 1934 | |
4.6692016091... | Feigenbaum constants | ? | ? | ? | ChT | 1,000+ | 1975 | |
2.5029078750... | ? | ? | ? | 1,000+ | 1979 |
Abbreviations used:
- Gen – General, NuT – Number theory, ChT – Chaos theory, Com – Combinatorics, Ana – Mathematical analysis
See also
- Glossary of mathematical symbols
- Invariant (mathematics)
- List of mathematical constants
- List of numbers
- Physical constant
- List of physical constants
Notes
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Constant". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-08.
- Grinstead, C.M.; Snell, J.L. "Introduction to probability theory". p. 85. Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
- Livio, Mario (2002). The Golden Ratio: The Story of Phi, The World's Most Astonishing Number. New York: Broadway Books. ISBN 0-7679-0815-5.
- Tatersall, James (2005). Elementary number theory in nine chapters (2nd ed.).
- "The Secret Life of Continued Fractions"
- Fibonacci Numbers and Nature - Part 2 : Why is the Golden section the "best" arrangement?, from Dr. Ron Knott's Fibonacci Numbers and the Golden Section, retrieved 2012-11-29.
- Finch, Steven (2003). Mathematical constants. Cambridge University Press. p. 67. ISBN 0-521-81805-2.
- Simoson, Andrew (2023-03-01). "In Pursuit of Zeta-3". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 45 (1): 85–87. doi:10.1007/s00283-022-10184-z. ISSN 1866-7414.
- Steven Finch. "Apéry's constant". MathWorld.
- Wyse, A. B.; Mayall, N. U. (January 1942), "Distribution of Mass in the Spiral Nebulae Messier 31 and Messier 33.", The Astrophysical Journal, 95: 24–47, Bibcode:1942ApJ....95...24W, doi:10.1086/144370
- Bailey, David H.; Borwein, Jonathan M.; Mattingly, Andrew; Wightwick, Glenn (2013), "The computation of previously inaccessible digits of and Catalan's constant", Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 60 (7): 844–854, doi:10.1090/noti1015, MR 3086394
- Collet & Eckmann (1980). Iterated maps on the inerval as dynamical systems. Birkhauser. ISBN 3-7643-3026-0.
- May, Robert (1976). Theoretical Ecology: Principles and Applications. Blackwell Scientific Publishers. ISBN 0-632-00768-0.
- Lanford III, Oscar (1982). "A computer-assisted proof of the Feigenbaum conjectures". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 6 (3): 427–434. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1982-15008-X.
- Fowler, David; Eleanor Robson (November 1998). "Square Root Approximations in Old Babylonian Mathematics: YBC 7289 in Context". Historia Mathematica. 25 (4): 368. doi:10.1006/hmat.1998.2209.
Photograph, illustration, and description of the root(2) tablet from the Yale Babylonian Collection
High resolution photographs, descriptions, and analysis of the root(2) tablet (YBC 7289) from the Yale Babylonian Collection - Bogomolny, Alexander. "Square root of 2 is irrational".
- Aubrey J. Kempner (Oct 1916). "On Transcendental Numbers". Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 17 (4). Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, Vol. 17, No. 4: 476–482. doi:10.2307/1988833. JSTOR 1988833.
- Champernowne, David (1933). "The Construction of Decimals Normal in the Scale of Ten". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. 8 (4): 254–260. doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-8.4.254.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Liouville's Constant". MathWorld.
- Rudin, Walter (1976) [1953]. Principles of mathematical analysis (3e ed.). McGraw-Hill. p.61 theorem 3.26. ISBN 0-07-054235-X.
- Stewart, James (1999). Calculus: Early transcendentals (4e ed.). Brooks/Cole. p. 706. ISBN 0-534-36298-2.
- Ludolph van Ceulen Archived 2015-07-07 at the Wayback Machine – biography at the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
- Knuth, Donald (1976). "Mathematics and Computer Science: Coping with Finiteness. Advances in Our Ability to Compute are Bringing Us Substantially Closer to Ultimate Limitations". Science. 194 (4271): 1235–1242. doi:10.1126/science.194.4271.1235. PMID 17797067. S2CID 1690489.
- "mathematical constants". Archived from the original on 2012-09-07. Retrieved 2007-11-27.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Grossman's constant". MathWorld.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Foias' constant". MathWorld.
- Edward Kasner and James R. Newman (1989). Mathematics and the Imagination. Microsoft Press. p. 23.
- "Records set by y-cruncher". www.numberworld.org. Retrieved 2024-08-22.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Glaisher-Kinkelin Constant Digits". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2024-10-05.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Khinchin's Constant Digits". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2024-10-05.
- "A006890 - OEIS". oeis.org. Retrieved 2024-08-22.
- "A006891 - OEIS". oeis.org. Retrieved 2024-08-22.
External links
- Constants – from Wolfram MathWorld
- Inverse symbolic calculator (CECM, ISC) (tells you how a given number can be constructed from mathematical constants)
- On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS)
- Simon Plouffe's inverter
- Steven Finch's page of mathematical constants (BROKEN LINK)
- Steven R. Finch, "Mathematical Constants," Encyclopedia of mathematics and its applications, Cambridge University Press (2003).
- Xavier Gourdon and Pascal Sebah's page of numbers, mathematical constants and algorithms
A mathematical constant is a number whose value is fixed by an unambiguous definition often referred to by a special symbol e g an alphabet letter or by mathematicians names to facilitate using it across multiple mathematical problems Constants arise in many areas of mathematics with constants such as e and p occurring in such diverse contexts as geometry number theory statistics and calculus The circumference of a circle with diameter 1 is p Some constants arise naturally by a fundamental principle or intrinsic property such as the ratio between the circumference and diameter of a circle p Other constants are notable more for historical reasons than for their mathematical properties The more popular constants have been studied throughout the ages and computed to many decimal places All named mathematical constants are definable numbers and usually are also computable numbers Chaitin s constant being a significant exception Basic mathematical constantsThese are constants which one is likely to encounter during pre college education in many countries Pythagoras constant 2 The square root of 2 is equal to the length of the hypotenuse of a right angled triangle with legs of length 1 The square root of 2 often known as root 2 or Pythagoras constant and written as 2 is the unique positive real number that when multiplied by itself gives the number 2 It is more precisely called the principal square root of 2 to distinguish it from the negative number with the same property Geometrically the square root of 2 is the length of a diagonal across a square with sides of one unit of length this follows from the Pythagorean theorem It is an irrational number possibly the first number to be known as such and an algebraic number Its numerical value truncated to 50 decimal places is 1 4142135623 73095 04880 16887 24209 69807 85696 71875 37694 sequence A002193 in the OEIS Alternatively the quick approximation 99 70 1 41429 for the square root of two was frequently used before the common use of electronic calculators and computers Despite having a denominator of only 70 it differs from the correct value by less than 1 10 000 approx 7 2 10 5 Its simple continued fraction is periodic and given by 2 1 12 12 12 1 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 2 frac 1 2 frac 1 ddots Archimedes constant p The area of the circle equals p times the shaded area The area of the unit circle is p The constant p pi has a natural definition in Euclidean geometry as the ratio between the circumference and diameter of a circle It may be found in many other places in mathematics for example the Gaussian integral the complex roots of unity and Cauchy distributions in probability However its ubiquity is not limited to pure mathematics It appears in many formulas in physics and several physical constants are most naturally defined with p or its reciprocal factored out For example the ground state wave function of the hydrogen atom is ps r 1pa03e r a0 displaystyle psi mathbf r frac 1 sqrt pi a 0 3 e r a 0 where a0 displaystyle a 0 is the Bohr radius p is an irrational number transcendental number and an algebraic period The numeric value of p is approximately 3 1415926535 89793 23846 26433 83279 50288 41971 69399 37510 sequence A000796 in the OEIS Unusually good approximations are given by the fractions 22 7 and 355 113 Memorizing as well as computing increasingly more digits of p is a world record pursuit Euler s number e Exponential growth green describes many physical phenomena Euler s number e also known as the exponential growth constant appears in many areas of mathematics and one possible definition of it is the value of the following expression e limn 1 1n n displaystyle e lim n to infty left 1 frac 1 n right n The constant e is intrinsically related to the exponential function x ex displaystyle x mapsto e x The Swiss mathematician Jacob Bernoulli discovered that e arises in compound interest If an account starts at 1 and yields interest at annual rate R then as the number of compounding periods per year tends to infinity a situation known as continuous compounding the amount of money at the end of the year will approach eR dollars The constant e also has applications to probability theory where it arises in a way not obviously related to exponential growth As an example suppose that a slot machine with a one in n probability of winning is played n times then for large n e g one million the probability that nothing will be won will tend to 1 e as n tends to infinity Another application of e discovered in part by Jacob Bernoulli along with French mathematician Pierre Raymond de Montmort is in the problem of derangements also known as the hat check problem Here n guests are invited to a party and at the door each guest checks his hat with the butler who then places them into labelled boxes The butler does not know the name of the guests and hence must put them into boxes selected at random The problem of de Montmort is what is the probability that none of the hats gets put into the right box The answer is pn 1 11 12 13 1 n1n displaystyle p n 1 frac 1 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 3 cdots 1 n frac 1 n which as n tends to infinity approaches 1 e e is an irrational number and a transcendental number The numeric value of e is approximately 2 7182818284 59045 23536 02874 71352 66249 77572 47093 69995 sequence A001113 in the OEIS The imaginary unit i The imaginary unit i in the complex plane Real numbers lie on the horizontal axis and imaginary numbers lie on the vertical axis The imaginary unit or unit imaginary number denoted as i is a mathematical concept which extends the real number system R displaystyle mathbb R to the complex number system C displaystyle mathbb C The imaginary unit s core property is that i2 1 The term imaginary was coined because there is no real number having a negative square There are in fact two complex square roots of 1 namely i and i just as there are two complex square roots of every other real number except zero which has one double square root In contexts where the symbol i is ambiguous or problematic j or the Greek iota i is sometimes used This is in particular the case in electrical engineering and control systems engineering where the imaginary unit is often denoted by j because i is commonly used to denote electric current The golden ratio f Golden rectangles in a regular icosahedronFn fn 1 f n5 displaystyle F n frac varphi n 1 varphi n sqrt 5 An explicit formula for the n th Fibonacci number involving the golden ratio f The number f also called the golden ratio turns up frequently in geometry particularly in figures with pentagonal symmetry Indeed the length of a regular pentagon s diagonal is f times its side The vertices of a regular icosahedron are those of three mutually orthogonal golden rectangles Also it is related to the Fibonacci sequence related to growth by recursion Kepler proved that it is the limit of the ratio of consecutive Fibonacci numbers The golden ratio has the slowest convergence of any irrational number It is for that reason one of the worst cases of Lagrange s approximation theorem and it is an extremal case of the Hurwitz inequality for diophantine approximations This may be why angles close to the golden ratio often show up in phyllotaxis the growth of plants It is approximately equal to 1 6180339887 49894 84820 45868 34365 63811 77203 09179 80576 sequence A001622 in the OEIS or more precisely 1 52 displaystyle frac 1 sqrt 5 2 Constants in advanced mathematicsThese are constants which are encountered frequently in higher mathematics The Euler Mascheroni constant g The area between the two curves red tends to a limit namely the Euler Mascheroni constant Euler s constant or the Euler Mascheroni constant is defined as the limiting difference between the harmonic series and the natural logarithm g limn ln n k 1n1k displaystyle begin aligned gamma amp lim n to infty left ln n sum k 1 n frac 1 k right 5px end aligned It appears frequently in mathematics especially in number theoretical contexts such as Mertens third theorem or the growth rate of the divisor function It has relations to the gamma function and its derivatives as well as the zeta function and there exist many different integrals and series involving g displaystyle gamma Despite the ubiquity of the Euler Mascheroni constant many of its properties remain unknown That includes the major open questions of whether it is a rational or irrational number and whether it is algebraic or transcendental In fact g displaystyle gamma has been described as a mathematical constant shadowed only p displaystyle pi and e displaystyle e in importance The numeric value of g displaystyle gamma is approximately 0 5772156649 01532 86060 65120 90082 40243 10421 59335 93992 sequence A001620 in the OEIS Apery s constant z 3 Apery s constant is defined as the sum of the reciprocals of the cubes of the natural numbers z 3 n 1 1n3 1 123 133 143 153 displaystyle zeta 3 sum n 1 infty frac 1 n 3 1 frac 1 2 3 frac 1 3 3 frac 1 4 3 frac 1 5 3 cdots It is the special value of the Riemann zeta function z s displaystyle zeta s at s 3 displaystyle s 3 The quest to find an exact value for this constant in terms of other known constants and elementary functions originated when Euler famously solved the Basel problem by giving z 2 16p2 displaystyle zeta 2 frac 1 6 pi 2 To date no such value has been found and it is conjectured that there is none However there exist many representations of z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 in terms of infinite series Apery s constant arises naturally in a number of physical problems including in the second and third order terms of the electron s gyromagnetic ratio computed using quantum electrodynamics z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 is known to be an irrational number which was proven by the French mathematician Roger Apery in 1979 It is however not known whether it is algebraic or transcendental The numeric value of Apery s constant is approximately 1 2020569031 59594 28539 97381 61511 44999 07649 86292 34049 sequence A002117 in the OEIS Catalan s constant G Catalan s constant is defined by the alternating sum of the reciprocals of the odd square numbers G n 0 1 n 2n 1 2 112 132 152 172 192 displaystyle G sum n 0 infty frac 1 n 2n 1 2 frac 1 1 2 frac 1 3 2 frac 1 5 2 frac 1 7 2 frac 1 9 2 cdots It is the special value of the Dirichlet beta function b s displaystyle beta s at s 2 displaystyle s 2 Catalan s constant appears frequently in combinatorics and number theory and also outside mathematics such as in the calculation of the mass distribution of spiral galaxies Questions about the arithmetic nature of this constant also remain unanswered G displaystyle G having been called arguably the most basic constant whose irrationality and transcendence though strongly suspected remain unproven There exist many integral and series representations of Catalan s constant It is named after the French and Belgian mathematician Charles Eugene Catalan The numeric value of G displaystyle G is approximately 0 9159655941 77219 01505 46035 14932 38411 07741 49374 28167 sequence A006752 in the OEIS The Feigenbaum constants a and d Bifurcation diagram of the logistic map Iterations of continuous maps serve as the simplest examples of models for dynamical systems Named after mathematical physicist Mitchell Feigenbaum the two Feigenbaum constants appear in such iterative processes they are mathematical invariants of logistic maps with quadratic maximum points and their bifurcation diagrams Specifically the constant a is the ratio between the width of a tine and the width of one of its two subtines and the constant d is the limiting ratio of each bifurcation interval to the next between every period doubling bifurcation The logistic map is a polynomial mapping often cited as an archetypal example of how chaotic behaviour can arise from very simple non linear dynamical equations The map was popularized in a seminal 1976 paper by the Australian biologist Robert May in part as a discrete time demographic model analogous to the logistic equation first created by Pierre Francois Verhulst The difference equation is intended to capture the two effects of reproduction and starvation The Feigenbaum constants in bifurcation theory are analogous to p in geometry and e in calculus Neither of them is known to be irrational or even transcendental However proofs of their universality exist The respective approximate numeric values of d and a are 4 6692016091 02990 67185 32038 20466 20161 72581 85577 47576 sequence A006890 in the OEIS 2 5029078750 95892 82228 39028 73218 21578 63812 71376 72714 sequence A006891 in the OEIS Mathematical curiositiesSimple representatives of sets of numbers c j 1 10 j 0 110001 3 digits000000000000000001 4 digits000 displaystyle c sum j 1 infty 10 j 0 underbrace overbrace 110001 3 text digits 000000000000000001 4 text digits 000 dots Liouville s constant is a simple example of a transcendental number Some constants such as the square root of 2 Liouville s constant and Champernowne constant C10 0 12345678910111213141516 displaystyle C 10 0 color blue 1 2 color blue 3 4 color blue 5 6 color blue 7 8 color blue 9 10 color blue 11 12 color blue 13 14 color blue 15 16 dots This Babylonian clay tablet gives an approximation of the square root of 2 in four sexagesimal figures 1 24 51 10 which is accurate to about six decimal figures are not important mathematical invariants but retain interest being simple representatives of special sets of numbers the irrational numbers the transcendental numbers and the normal numbers in base 10 respectively The discovery of the irrational numbers is usually attributed to the Pythagorean Hippasus of Metapontum who proved most likely geometrically the irrationality of the square root of 2 As for Liouville s constant named after French mathematician Joseph Liouville it was the first number to be proven transcendental Chaitin s constant W In the computer science subfield of algorithmic information theory Chaitin s constant is the real number representing the probability that a randomly chosen Turing machine will halt formed from a construction due to Argentine American mathematician and computer scientist Gregory Chaitin Chaitin s constant though not being computable has been proven to be transcendental and normal Chaitin s constant is not universal depending heavily on the numerical encoding used for Turing machines however its interesting properties are independent of the encoding NotationRepresenting constants It is common to express the numerical value of a constant by giving its decimal representation or just the first few digits of it For two reasons this representation may cause problems First even though rational numbers all have a finite or ever repeating decimal expansion irrational numbers don t have such an expression making them impossible to completely describe in this manner Also the decimal expansion of a number is not necessarily unique For example the two representations 0 999 and 1 are equivalent in the sense that they represent the same number Calculating digits of the decimal expansion of constants has been a common enterprise for many centuries For example German mathematician Ludolph van Ceulen of the 16th century spent a major part of his life calculating the first 35 digits of pi Using computers and supercomputers some of the mathematical constants including p e and the square root of 2 have been computed to more than one hundred billion digits Fast algorithms have been developed some of which as for Apery s constant are unexpectedly fast G 3 3 3 3 64 layers displaystyle G left begin matrix 3 underbrace uparrow ldots uparrow 3 underbrace vdots 3 uparrow uparrow uparrow uparrow 3 end matrix right text 64 layers Graham s number defined using Knuth s up arrow notation Some constants differ so much from the usual kind that a new notation has been invented to represent them reasonably Graham s number illustrates this as Knuth s up arrow notation is used It may be of interest to represent them using continued fractions to perform various studies including statistical analysis Many mathematical constants have an analytic form that is they can be constructed using well known operations that lend themselves readily to calculation Not all constants have known analytic forms though Grossman s constant and Foias constant are examples Symbolizing and naming of constants Symbolizing constants with letters is a frequent means of making the notation more concise A common convention instigated by Rene Descartes in the 17th century and Leonhard Euler in the 18th century is to use lower case letters from the beginning of the Latin alphabet a b c displaystyle a b c dots or the Greek alphabet a b g displaystyle alpha beta gamma dots when dealing with constants in general However for more important constants the symbols may be more complex and have an extra letter an asterisk a number a lemniscate or use different alphabets such as Hebrew Cyrillic or Gothic Erdos Borwein constant EB displaystyle E B Embree Trefethen constant b displaystyle beta Brun s constant for twin prime B2 displaystyle B 2 Champernowne constants Cb displaystyle C b cardinal number aleph naught ℵ0 displaystyle aleph 0 Examples of different kinds of notation for constants Sometimes the symbol representing a constant is a whole word For example American mathematician Edward Kasner s 9 year old nephew coined the names googol and googolplex googol 10100 googolplex 10googol 1010100 displaystyle mathrm googol 10 100 mathrm googolplex 10 mathrm googol 10 10 100 Other names are either related to the meaning of the constant universal parabolic constant twin prime constant or to a specific person Sierpinski s constant Josephson constant and so on The universal parabolic constant is the ratio for any parabola of the arc length of the parabolic segment red formed by the latus rectum blue to the focal parameter green Selected mathematical constantsSymbol Value Name Rational Algebraic Period Field Known digits First described0 displaystyle 0 0 0000000000 Zero Gen all c 500 BC1 displaystyle 1 1 0000000000 One Gen all Prehistoryi displaystyle i 0 1i Imaginary unit Gen Ana all 1500sp displaystyle pi 3 1415926535 Pi Archimedes constant Gen Ana 2 0 1014 c 2600 BCe displaystyle e 2 7182818284 e Euler s number Gen Ana 3 5 1013 16182 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 4142135623 Square root of 2 Pythagoras constant Gen 2 0 1013 c 800 BC3 displaystyle sqrt 3 1 7320508075 Square root of 3 Theodorus constant Gen 3 1 1012 c 800 BCf displaystyle varphi 1 6180339887 Golden ratio Gen 2 0 1013 c 200 BC23 displaystyle sqrt 3 2 1 2599210498 Cube root of two Gen 1 0 1012 c 380 BCln 2 displaystyle ln 2 0 6931471805 Natural logarithm of 2 Gen Ana 3 0 1012 1619g displaystyle gamma 0 5772156649 Euler Mascheroni constant Gen NuT 1 3 1012 1735z 3 displaystyle zeta 3 1 2020569031 Apery s constant Ana 2 0 1012 1780G displaystyle G 0 9159655941 Catalan s constant Com 1 2 1012 1832ϖ displaystyle varpi 2 6220575542 Lemniscate constant Ana 1 2 1012 1700sA displaystyle A 1 2824271291 Glaisher Kinkelin constant Ana 5 0 105 1860K0 displaystyle K 0 2 6854520010 Khinchin s constant NuT 1 1 105 1934d displaystyle delta 4 6692016091 Feigenbaum constants ChT 1 000 1975a displaystyle alpha 2 5029078750 1 000 1979 Abbreviations used Gen General NuT Number theory ChT Chaos theory Com Combinatorics Ana Mathematical analysisSee alsoGlossary of mathematical symbols Invariant mathematics List of mathematical constants List of numbers Physical constant List of physical constantsNotesWeisstein Eric W Constant mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2020 08 08 Grinstead C M Snell J L Introduction to probability theory p 85 Archived from the original on 2011 07 27 Retrieved 2007 12 09 Livio Mario 2002 The Golden Ratio The Story of Phi The World s Most Astonishing Number New York Broadway Books ISBN 0 7679 0815 5 Tatersall James 2005 Elementary number theory in nine chapters 2nd ed The Secret Life of Continued Fractions Fibonacci Numbers and Nature Part 2 Why is the Golden section the best arrangement from Dr Ron Knott s Fibonacci Numbers and the Golden Section retrieved 2012 11 29 Finch Steven 2003 Mathematical constants Cambridge University Press p 67 ISBN 0 521 81805 2 Simoson Andrew 2023 03 01 In Pursuit of Zeta 3 The Mathematical Intelligencer 45 1 85 87 doi 10 1007 s00283 022 10184 z ISSN 1866 7414 Steven Finch Apery s constant MathWorld Wyse A B Mayall N U January 1942 Distribution of Mass in the Spiral Nebulae Messier 31 and Messier 33 The Astrophysical Journal 95 24 47 Bibcode 1942ApJ 95 24W doi 10 1086 144370 Bailey David H Borwein Jonathan M Mattingly Andrew Wightwick Glenn 2013 The computation of previously inaccessible digits of p2 displaystyle pi 2 and Catalan s constant Notices of the American Mathematical Society 60 7 844 854 doi 10 1090 noti1015 MR 3086394 Collet amp Eckmann 1980 Iterated maps on the inerval as dynamical systems Birkhauser ISBN 3 7643 3026 0 May Robert 1976 Theoretical Ecology Principles and Applications Blackwell Scientific Publishers ISBN 0 632 00768 0 Lanford III Oscar 1982 A computer assisted proof of the Feigenbaum conjectures Bull Amer Math Soc 6 3 427 434 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 1982 15008 X Fowler David Eleanor Robson November 1998 Square Root Approximations in Old Babylonian Mathematics YBC 7289 in Context Historia Mathematica 25 4 368 doi 10 1006 hmat 1998 2209 Photograph illustration and description of the root 2 tablet from the Yale Babylonian Collection High resolution photographs descriptions and analysis of the root 2 tablet YBC 7289 from the Yale Babylonian Collection Bogomolny Alexander Square root of 2 is irrational Aubrey J Kempner Oct 1916 On Transcendental Numbers Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 17 4 Transactions of the American Mathematical Society Vol 17 No 4 476 482 doi 10 2307 1988833 JSTOR 1988833 Champernowne David 1933 The Construction of Decimals Normal in the Scale of Ten Journal of the London Mathematical Society 8 4 254 260 doi 10 1112 jlms s1 8 4 254 Weisstein Eric W Liouville s Constant MathWorld Rudin Walter 1976 1953 Principles of mathematical analysis 3e ed McGraw Hill p 61 theorem 3 26 ISBN 0 07 054235 X Stewart James 1999 Calculus Early transcendentals 4e ed Brooks Cole p 706 ISBN 0 534 36298 2 Ludolph van Ceulen Archived 2015 07 07 at the Wayback Machine biography at the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive Knuth Donald 1976 Mathematics and Computer Science Coping with Finiteness Advances in Our Ability to Compute are Bringing Us Substantially Closer to Ultimate Limitations Science 194 4271 1235 1242 doi 10 1126 science 194 4271 1235 PMID 17797067 S2CID 1690489 mathematical constants Archived from the original on 2012 09 07 Retrieved 2007 11 27 Weisstein Eric W Grossman s constant MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Foias constant MathWorld Edward Kasner and James R Newman 1989 Mathematics and the Imagination Microsoft Press p 23 Records set by y cruncher www numberworld org Retrieved 2024 08 22 Weisstein Eric W Glaisher Kinkelin Constant Digits mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2024 10 05 Weisstein Eric W Khinchin s Constant Digits mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2024 10 05 A006890 OEIS oeis org Retrieved 2024 08 22 A006891 OEIS oeis org Retrieved 2024 08 22 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Mathematical constants Constants from Wolfram MathWorld Inverse symbolic calculator CECM ISC tells you how a given number can be constructed from mathematical constants On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Simon Plouffe s inverter Steven Finch s page of mathematical constants BROKEN LINK Steven R Finch Mathematical Constants Encyclopedia of mathematics and its applications Cambridge University Press 2003 Xavier Gourdon and Pascal Sebah s page of numbers mathematical constants and algorithms