In mathematics Lévy's constant (sometimes known as the Khinchin–Lévy constant) occurs in an expression for the asymptotic behaviour of the denominators of the convergents of simple continued fractions.
[1] In 1935, the Soviet mathematician Aleksandr Khinchin showed[2] that the denominators qn of the convergents of the continued fraction expansions of almost all real numbers satisfy Soon afterward, in 1936, the French mathematician Paul Lévy found[3] the explicit expression for the constant, namely The term "Lévy's constant" is sometimes used to refer to
( 12 ln 2 )
(the logarithm of the above expression), which is approximately equal to 1.1865691104… The value derives from the asymptotic expectation of the logarithm of the ratio of successive denominators, using the Gauss-Kuzmin distribution.
In particular, the ratio has the asymptotic density function[citation needed]
z ( z + 1 ) ln ( 2 )
This gives Lévy's constant as
ln z
z ( z + 1 ) ln 2
ln
( z + 1 ) ln 2
12 ln 2
The base-10 logarithm of Lévy's constant, which is approximately 0.51532041…, is half of the reciprocal of the limit in Lochs' theorem.
[4] The proof assumes basic properties of continued fractions.
be the Gauss map.
ln x − ln
is the Fibonacci number.
Define the function
f ( t ) = ln
The quantity to estimate is then
The denominator sequence
satisfies a recurrence relation, and so it is at least as large as the Fibonacci sequence
− ln
= ln
is finite, and is called the reciprocal Fibonacci constant.
By Birkhoff's ergodic theorem, the limit
( − ln t ) ρ ( t ) d t =
is the Gauss distribution.
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