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List of representations of e

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The mathematical constant e can be represented in a variety of ways as a real number. Since e is an irrational number (see proof that e is irrational), it cannot be represented as a fraction, but it can be represented as a continued fraction. Using calculus, e may also be represented as an infinite series, infinite product, or other sort of limit of a sequence.

As a continued fraction

Euler proved that the number e is represented as the infinite simple continued fraction[1] (sequence A003417 in the OEIS):

Its convergence can be tripled by allowing just one fractional number:

Here are some infinite generalized continued fraction expansions of e. The second is generated from the first by a simple equivalence transformation.

This last, equivalent to [1; 0.5, 12, 5, 28, 9, ...], is a special case of a general formula for the exponential function:

As an infinite series

The number e can be expressed as the sum of the following infinite series:

for any real number x.

In the special case where x = 1, or −1, we have:

,[2] and

Other series include the following:

[3]
where is the Bell number. Some few examples: (for n=1,2,3)

As an infinite product

The number e is also given by several infinite product forms including Pippenger's product

and Guillera's product [4][5]

where the nth factor is the nth root of the product

as well as the infinite product

As the limit of a sequence

The number e is equal to the limit of several infinite sequences:

and
(both by Stirling's formula).

The symmetric limit,[6][7]

may be obtained by manipulation of the basic limit definition of e.

The next two definitions are direct corollaries of the prime number theorem[8]

where is the nth prime and is the primorial of the nth prime.

where is the prime counting function.

Also:

In the special case that , the result is the famous statement:

In trigonometry

Trigonometrically, e can be written as the sum of two hyperbolic functions:

Notes

  1. ^ Sandifer, Ed (Feb 2006). "How Euler Did It: Who proved e is Irrational?" (PDF). MAA Online. Retrieved 2010-06-18.
  2. ^ Brown, Stan (2006-08-27). "It's the Law Too — the Laws of Logarithms". Oak Road Systems. Retrieved 2008-08-14.
  3. ^ Formulas 2–7: H. J. Brothers, Improving the convergence of Newton's series approximation for e, The College Mathematics Journal, Vol. 35, No. 1, (2004), pp. 34–39.
  4. ^ J. Sondow, A faster product for pi and a new integral for ln pi/2, Amer. Math. Monthly 112 (2005) 729–734.
  5. ^ J. Guillera and J. Sondow, Double integrals and infinite products for some classical constants via analytic continuations of Lerch's transcendent,Ramanujan Journal 16 (2008), 247–270.
  6. ^ H. J. Brothers and J. A. Knox, New closed-form approximations to the Logarithmic Constant e, The Mathematical Intelligencer, Vol. 20, No. 4, (1998), pp. 25–29.
  7. ^ Khattri, Sanjay. "From Lobatto Quadrature to the Euler constant e" (PDF).
  8. ^ S. M. Ruiz 1997