Convergents of Continued Fractions of Root 7



Next: Families of Continued Fractions Up: Families of Continued Fractions Previous: Introduction
Continued Fractions
A continued fraction is anything that has the form ![]() | (2.1) |
where each a i --a partial denominator--and b i --a a partial numerator--are objects which can be added, multiplied, or divided. In other words, a i and b i are elements of some subset of a field, for all i. Often the partial numerators and denominators are restricted to the set of integers, which is a subset of many fields. The whole continued fraction itself is an element of the field that is a superset of the set containing the partial numerators and denominators. Thus, abstractly, a continued fraction is a number

where



for all

![[*]](https://www.math.arizona.edu/gifs/latex2html/cross_ref_motif.gif)


Suppose that () is simple and terminated after a n , so that a continued fraction x has the form
![]() | (2.2) |
In standard notation, the continued fraction (
![[*]](https://www.math.arizona.edu/gifs/latex2html/cross_ref_motif.gif)
![$x = [a_0, a_1, \ldots, a_n]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img13.gif)
![[*]](https://www.math.arizona.edu/gifs/latex2html/cross_ref_motif.gif)
![$[a_0, a_1, \ldots]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img14.gif)
![$P_k/Q_k = [a_0, a_1, \ldots, a_k]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img15.gif)

Theorem 1 For continued fractions of the form (), convergents satisfy the fundamental recurrence relation
![]() | (2.3) |
where
P -2 = 0,
P -1 = 1,
Q -2 = 1, and
Q -1 = 0.

Another theorem from the theory of simple continued fractions is needed for the development of the rest of the report, which is the following theorem.
Theorem 2 For all ,
![]() | (2.4) |

These two theorems are the only ones from the theory of finite continued fractions, although they apply to infinite continued fractions as well, that will be needed for the study of families of continued fractions. For more information on finite continued fractions see [2], [6], [7], and [8].
Finding the continued fraction for the square root of some positive, non-square integer is an easy process. It proceeds by first adding and subtracting the greatest integer in the square root from the square root, then taking the reciprocal of the reciprocal of the square root minus the greatest integer in it, and then rationalizing the denominator of the resulting fraction. The same process is applied to the new quadratic irrational, and it continues until the resulting surd is the same as one of the previous surds. For example,
Since

which is
![$\sqrt{2} = [1, \overline{2}]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img26.gif)
Theorem 3 If d is a positive, non-square integer, then
, where each partial quotient is a positive integer.

There are many patterns among the continued fractions expansions of surds, some of them being more evident than others. In just the short list of continued fractions below,
one can see many patterns, such as:![$\sqrt{k^2 + 1} = [k, \overline{2k}]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img73.gif)
![$\sqrt{k^2 + 2} = [k, \overline{k, 2k}]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img74.gif)
![$\sqrt{(k+1)^2 - 1} = [k, \overline{1, k-1, 1, 2k}]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img75.gif)
![$\sqrt{k^2 + c} = [k, \overline{2k/c, 2k}]$](https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/img76.gif)



Next: Families of Continued Fractions Up: Families of Continued Fractions Previous: Introduction mcenter
2000-01-06
copelandtrince1983.blogspot.com
Source: https://www.math.arizona.edu/~ura-reports/993/miller.justin/node2.html
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