Gelfond–Schneider constant
{{distinguish|Gelfond's constant}}
The Gelfond–Schneider constant or Hilbert number{{citation|authorlink=Richard Courant|authorlink2=Herbert Robbins|first1=R.|last1=Courant|first2=H.|last2=Robbins|title=What Is Mathematics?: An Elementary Approach to Ideas and Methods|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1996|page=107}} is two to the power of the square root of two:
:2{{sup|{{sqrt|2}}}} ≈ {{val|2.6651441426902251886502972498731}}...
which was proved to be a transcendental number by Rodion Kuzmin in 1930.{{cite journal |author=R. O. Kuzmin |title=On a new class of transcendental numbers |journal=Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Ser. Matem. |volume=7 |year=1930 |pages=585–597 |url=http://mi.mathnet.ru/eng/izv5316}}
In 1934, Aleksandr Gelfond and Theodor Schneider independently proved the more general Gelfond–Schneider theorem,{{cite journal |author=Aleksandr Gelfond |title=Sur le septième Problème de Hilbert |journal=Bulletin de l'Académie des Sciences de l'URSS. Classe des sciences mathématiques et na |volume=VII |issue=4 |pages=623–634 |year=1934 |url=http://mi.mathnet.ru/eng/izv4924}} which solved the part of Hilbert's seventh problem described below.
Properties
The square root of the Gelfond–Schneider constant is the transcendental number
: {{val|1.63252691943815284477}}....
This same constant can be used to prove that "an irrational elevated to an irrational power may be rational", even without first proving its transcendence. The proof proceeds as follows: either is a rational which proves the theorem, or it is irrational (as it turns out to be) and then
:
is an irrational to an irrational power that is a rational which proves the theorem.{{citation
| last = Jarden | first = D.
| journal = Scripta Mathematica
| page = 229
| title = Curiosa: A simple proof that a power of an irrational number to an irrational exponent may be rational
| volume = 19
| year = 1953}}.{{citation
| last1 = Jones | first1 = J. P.
| last2 = Toporowski | first2 = S.
| doi = 10.2307/2319091
| journal = American Mathematical Monthly
| mr = 0314775
| pages = 423–424
| title = Irrational numbers
| volume = 80
| year = 1973| issue = 4
| jstor = 2319091
}}, The proof is not constructive, as it does not say which of the two cases is true, but it is much simpler than Kuzmin's proof.
Hilbert's seventh problem
{{main|Hilbert's seventh problem}}
Part of the seventh of Hilbert's twenty-three problems posed in 1900 was to prove, or find a counterexample to, the claim that ab is always transcendental for algebraic a ≠ 0, 1 and irrational algebraic b. In the address he gave two explicit examples, one of them being the Gelfond–Schneider constant 2{{sqrt|2}}.
In 1919, he gave a lecture on number theory and spoke of three conjectures: the Riemann hypothesis, Fermat's Last Theorem, and the transcendence of 2{{sqrt|2}}. He mentioned to the audience that he didn't expect anyone in the hall to live long enough to see a proof of this result.David Hilbert, Natur und mathematisches Erkennen: Vorlesungen, gehalten 1919–1920. But the proof of this number's transcendence was published by Kuzmin in 1930, well within Hilbert's own lifetime. Namely, Kuzmin proved the case where the exponent b is a real quadratic irrational, which was later extended to an arbitrary algebraic irrational b by Gelfond and by Schneider.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
Further reading
- {{cite book | last=Ribenboim | first=Paulo | authorlink=Paulo Ribenboim | title=My Numbers, My Friends: Popular Lectures on Number Theory | series=Universitext | publisher=Springer-Verlag | year=2000 | isbn=0-387-98911-0 | zbl=0947.11001 }}
- {{cite book | editor=Felix E. Browder | editor-link=Felix Browder | title=Mathematical Developments Arising from Hilbert Problems | series=Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics | volume=XXVIII.1 | year=1976 | publisher=American Mathematical Society | isbn=0-8218-1428-1 | first=Robert | last=Tijdeman | authorlink=Robert Tijdeman | chapter=On the Gel'fond–Baker method and its applications | pages=241–268 | zbl=0341.10026 }}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gelfond-Schneider Constant}}