On the Connection Between Irrationality Measures and Polynomial Continued Fractions
Nadav Ben David, Guy Nimri, Uri Mendlovic, Yahel Manor, Carlos De la Cruz Mengual, and Ido Kaminer

TL;DR
This paper explores how polynomial continued fractions (PCFs) derived from linear recursions can be used to prove irrationality or approximate fundamental constants, extending Apéry's work and proposing new conjectures.
Contribution
It generalizes Apéry's approach to polynomial continued fractions, establishing conditions for irrationality proofs and efficiency in approximations of constants.
Findings
Identifies conditions under which PCFs prove irrationality
Analyzes convergence rates and efficiency of PCFs from Ramanujan Machine
Proposes new conjectures on Diophantine approximations from PCFs
Abstract
Linear recursions with integer coefficients, such as the one generating the Fibonacci sequence, have been intensely studied over millennia and yet still hide new mathematics. Such a recursion was used by Ap\'ery in his proof of the irrationality of , later named the Ap\'ery constant. Ap\'ery's proof used a specific linear recursion containing integer polynomials forming a continued fraction; called polynomial continued fractions (PCFs). Similar polynomial recursions prove the irrationality of other mathematical constants such as and . More generally, the sequences generated by PCFs form Diophantine approximations (DAs), which are ubiquitous in areas of math such as number theory. It is not known which polynomial recursions create useful DAs and whether they prove irrationality. Here, we present general conclusions and conjectures about DAs created from PCFs.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Mathematical Identities · Advanced Mathematical Theories and Applications · Benford’s Law and Fraud Detection
