[VA] SRC#002- Almost integers and other beasties
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12-15-2018, 09:56 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-16-2018 03:48 AM by Valentin Albillo.)
Post: #9
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RE: [VA] SRC#002- Almost integers and other beasties
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Hi, Gerson: (12-14-2018 03:14 PM)Gerson W. Barbosa Wrote: More or less in the same vein, Thanks for your excellent findings, I was sure you'd never fail to contribute some amazing near-identities to this thread. As Bob Prosperi already pointed out, I too find this one particularly beautiful: Quote:\[ \ln \left ( \frac{16\ln 878}{\ln \left ( 16\ln 878 \right )}\right )=3.14159265377 \] Good finding indeed ! By the way, it's quite nice that the simple function x/Ln(x) sometimes gives almost-integer results for integer arguments (which means its graphic passes extremely close to integer-coordinates grid points), such as the following, in increasing order of "closeness": x x/Ln(x) --------------------------------- 17 6.0002541... 163 31.9999987... 53453 4910.0000012... 110673 9529.0000006... 715533 53078.0000004... so that we have, for instance, 53453/Ln(53453) = 4910.0000012... In your case the argument x=16*Ln(878) results in x/Ln(x) being 23,1406926369... which is almost the famous Gelfond's constant = e^Pi (the easiest transcendental number to compute to high precision) so its natural logarithm is very nearly Pi itself. Nice catch ! Have a fine weekend and best regards V. . All My Articles & other Materials here: Valentin Albillo's HP Collection |
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