Displaying 21 – 40 of 74

Showing per page

Introduction to Liouville Numbers

Adam Grabowski, Artur Korniłowicz (2017)

Formalized Mathematics

The article defines Liouville numbers, originally introduced by Joseph Liouville in 1844 [17] as an example of an object which can be approximated “quite closely” by a sequence of rational numbers. A real number x is a Liouville number iff for every positive integer n, there exist integers p and q such that q > 1 and [...] It is easy to show that all Liouville numbers are irrational. Liouville constant, which is also defined formally, is the first transcendental (not algebraic) number. It is...

Khintchine types of translated coordinate hyperplanes

Felipe A. Ramírez (2015)

Acta Arithmetica

There has been great interest in developing a theory of "Khintchine types" for manifolds embedded in Euclidean space, and considerable progress has been made for curved manifolds. We treat the case of translates of coordinate hyperplanes, decidedly flat manifolds. In our main results, we fix the value of one coordinate in Euclidean space and describe the set of points in the fiber over that fixed coordinate that are rationally approximable at a given rate. We identify translated coordinate hyperplanes...

Multiplicative zero-one laws and metric number theory

Victor Beresnevich, Alan Haynes, Sanju Velani (2013)

Acta Arithmetica

We develop the classical theory of Diophantine approximation without assuming monotonicity or convexity. A complete 'multiplicative' zero-one law is established akin to the 'simultaneous' zero-one laws of Cassels and Gallagher. As a consequence we are able to establish the analogue of the Duffin-Schaeffer theorem within the multiplicative setup. The key ingredient is the rather simple but nevertheless versatile 'cross fibering principle'. In a nutshell it enables us to 'lift' zero-one laws to higher...

Currently displaying 21 – 40 of 74