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23:01
Not sure how to find a closed-form
This kind of reminds me of nested radical problems :P
Perhaps Math.SE could help
@LegionMammal978 1 + 1/(2 + 1/(4 + ...?
@LegionMammal978 it is probably difficult
As I said, this set is pretty weird
Is [1;0] a valid element in your set?
23:07
well
we have
a(n) = 2**n + 1/(a(n+1))
right?
@flawr It would expand to [1; 0, 0, 0, ...], which Mathematica tells me is division by 0
@orlp Yes...
@LegionMammal978 Mathematica != math :D
@flawr Wait, no, wrong fraction
@LegionMammal978 for this particular example you can maybe use the formula for the n-th convergent (idk how to correctly translate)
@flawr 1, 3/2, 13/9, 107/74, etc. doesn't make much sense to me
23:10
@LegionMammal978 Your avatar is driving me insane... :P
5
@LegionMammal978 you should put a hat on that blankness, maybe an invisible one?
ISC finds nothing for the number
@LegionMammal978 There is a formula
@LegionMammal978 de.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
(sorry for linking to the german one, but you'll understand it anyway)
@flawr Can't find that section on the English version
let b(n) := 2^n , then the number we're looking at is [b(0); b(1), b(2),...]
23:14
Yes...
and p(n)/q(n) = [b(0); b(1), b(2),...,b(n)]
for p(n) := b(n)*p(n-1)+p(n-2)
and q(n) := b(n)*q(n-1)+q(n-2)
where p(-1) = 1 , p(-2) = 0
I see those parts
and q(-1) =0 , q(-2) = 1
The question is, what is the limit of this
now let us try to find an explicit formula for q(n)
23:16
@flawr Mathematica's RSolve refuses
@LegionMammal978 let's try formal power series
@LegionMammal978 Same here. I think I've used at least 500 tissues over the last four days...
Also, this page briefly mentions my [1; 2] but doesn't give a closed form
> 1.445934640512202668 cf! s= 1/(2^(m-1)+s); 1/s [1;2,4,8,16,32..]
@LegionMammal978 oeis.org/A061377
the denominators are a(n) = 2^(n-1) a(n-1) + a(n-2)
Can you solve the functional equation S(x) - p(1) x - p(0) = 2*x*(S(2*x)-p(0)) + x *S(x)
23:22
@flawr wat
@LegionMammal978 the coefficients of x^n in the taylor series of S(x) would be p(n)
Umm... how would I give this to Mathematica?
I don't know mathematica
I mean, p(0) = 1 and p(1) = 3
@flawr Now only two convolutions
:(
:D
23:25
So would it be S(x) - 3x - 1 = 2x(S(2x) - 1) + x S(x)?
@LegionMammal978 probably, if I didn't mess up=)
But it is probably hopeless anyway
@LuisMendo Now you've got a spare one for free :)
@flawr Let's see how soon I can stick it into another answer :)
@flawr Mathematica tells me S(x) = (-2x S(2x) - x - 1)/(x - 1)
Well, that confused me for a while.
Said the door handle with a fork as hat :P
23:35
@LuisMendo *spork
@LuisMendo Do you know Sara Niemietz? She's an amazing singer, and she's got an amazing guitarrist: Snuffy Walden youtube.com/watch?v=GRuC4VS5I3w
@flawr TIL
(perhaps you've already seen her in some postmodern-jukebox videos)
(and I can't get this riff outta my head)
@LegionMammal978 I have insight
@flawr He's good, yes! :)
BTW A recently published a song in Soundcloud
Actually I don't play a single instrument in it :)
23:39
you're singing?
Haha no. Listen to it!
@LuisMendo Oh I like the cover so far=)
You may recognize some part of the song. It's entirely made of pieces from other songs
a(0) = 1; a(1) = 1; a(n) = 2**(n-1) * a(n-1) + a(n-2)
b(0) = 0; b(1) = 1; b(n) = 2**(n-1) * b(n-1) + b(n-2)
and movie dialogs
23:40
@LegionMammal978 1.44... = a(big) / b(big)
@flawr The double-slit experiment :-)
@orlp It would have to be 2^(n-2)
@LegionMammal978 no, this is correct
Also, don't experiments show that a(0) = b(0) = 1, a(1) = 3, and b(1) = 2?
@LegionMammal978 that's equivalent
just a different starting point
23:41
@orlp can't you plug this into mathematica?
@LuisMendo oh now I see=)
@flawr As I said, I tried that but RSolve refused
that's amazing=)
@flawr Your avatar is killing my eyes
@LegionMammal978 wait, did you already have these formulas?
I just made them =/
@orlp This onwards
(with b(n) = 2^n)
23:43
ah
But yeah, could you see if there's closed forms for a(n) and b(n)?
A214070 appears to be my constant...
A096641 is my constant minus one, which seems to already have an infinite series representation
@LegionMammal978 I edited OEIS
awaiting approval
I added a(n) = 2^(n-1) a(n-1) + a(n-2) to oeis.org/A061377
@LegionMammal978 arxiv.org/pdf/math/0402461 Page 2
ramanujan is crazy
Was there ever a cowsay code golf?
23:59
yes

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