Catalan
is Catalan's constant, with numerical value .
Background & Context
- Catalan is the symbol representing the mathematical constant known as Catalan's constant. Catalan is defined as the infinite alternating sum of reciprocals of squared odd integers and has numerical value . Catalan commonly appears in estimates of combinatorial functions and in certain classes of sums and definite integrals. Catalan also arises in particular values of special functions such as DirichletBeta, Zeta, and PolyLog.
- When Catalan is used as a symbol, it is propagated as an exact quantity. Expansion and simplification of complicated expressions involving Catalan may require use of functions such as FunctionExpand and FullSimplify.
- It is not currently known if Catalan is rational (meaning it can be expressed as a ratio of integers), algebraic (meaning it is the root of some integer polynomial), or normal (meaning the digits in its base- expansion are equally distributed) to any base.
- Catalan can be evaluated to arbitrary numerical precision by means of a rapidly converging Zeilberger-type sum using N. In fact, calculating the first hundred thousand decimal digits of Catalan takes only a fraction of a second on a modern desktop computer. RealDigits can be used to return a list of digits of Catalan and ContinuedFraction to obtain terms of its continued fraction expansion.
Examples
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Wolfram Research (1988), Catalan, Wolfram Language function, https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/Catalan.html.
Text
Wolfram Research (1988), Catalan, Wolfram Language function, https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/Catalan.html.
CMS
Wolfram Language. 1988. "Catalan." Wolfram Language & System Documentation Center. Wolfram Research. https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/Catalan.html.
APA
Wolfram Language. (1988). Catalan. Wolfram Language & System Documentation Center. Retrieved from https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/Catalan.html