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A number which is not the Root of any Polynomial equation with Integer Coefficients, meaning that it is not an Algebraic Number of any degree, is said to be transcendental. This definition guarantees that every transcendental number must also be Irrational, since a Rational Number is, by definition, an Algebraic Number of degree one.
Transcendental numbers are important in the history of mathematics because their investigation provided the first proof
that Circle Squaring, one of the Geometric Problems of Antiquity which had baffled mathematicians for more
than 2000 years was, in fact, insoluble. Specifically, in order for a number to be produced by a Geometric
Construction using the ancient Greek rules, it must be either Rational or a very special kind
of Algebraic Number known as a Euclidean Number. Because the number is transcendental, the construction
cannot be done according to the Greek rules.
Georg Cantor was the first to prove the Existence of transcendental numbers.
Liouville
subsequently showed how to construct special cases (such as Liouville's Constant) using
Liouville's Rational Approximation Theorem. In particular, he showed that any number which has a rapidly converging
sequence of rational approximations must be transcendental. For many years, it was only known how to determine if special
classes of numbers were transcendental. The determination of the status of more general numbers was considered an
important enough unsolved problem that it was one of Hilbert's Problems.
Great progress was subsequently made by Gelfond's Theorem, which gives a general rule for determining if special
cases of numbers of the form are transcendental. Baker produced a further revolution by proving the
transcendence of sums of numbers of the form
for Algebraic
Numbers
and
.
The number e was proven to be transcendental by Hermite in 1873, and Pi (
) by
Lindemann
in 1882.
is transcendental by Gelfond's Theorem since
It is not known if ,
,
,
(the Euler-Mascheroni Constant),
, or
(where
is a Modified Bessel Function of the First Kind) are transcendental.
The ``degree'' of transcendence of a number can be characterized by a so-called Liouville-Roth Constant. There are still many fundamental and outstanding problems in transcendental number theory, including the Constant Problem and Schanuel's Conjecture.
See also Algebraic Number, Constant Problem, Gelfond's Theorem, Irrational Number, Lindemann-Weierstraß Theorem, Liouville-Roth Constant, Roth's Theorem, Schanuel's Conjecture, Thue-Siegel-Roth Theorem
References
Allouche, J. P. and Shallit, J. In preparation.
Baker, A. ``Approximations to the Logarithm of Certain Rational Numbers.'' Acta Arith. 10, 315-323, 1964.
Baker, A. ``Linear Forms in the Logarithms of Algebraic Numbers I.'' Mathematika 13, 204-216, 1966.
Baker, A. ``Linear Forms in the Logarithms of Algebraic Numbers II.'' Mathematika 14, 102-107, 1966.
Baker, A. ``Linear Forms in the Logarithms of Algebraic Numbers III.'' Mathematika 14, 220-228, 1966.
Baker, A. ``Linear Forms in the Logarithms of Algebraic Numbers IV.'' Mathematika 15, 204-216, 1966.
Borwein, J. M.; Borwein, P. B.; and Bailey, D. H. ``Ramanujan, Modular Equations, and Approximations to Pi or How to
Compute One Billion Digits of Pi.'' Amer. Math. Monthly 96, 201-219, 1989.
Chudnovsky, G. V. Contributions to the Theory of Transcendental Numbers. Providence, RI: Amer. Math. Soc., 1984.
Courant, R. and Robbins, H. ``Algebraic and Transcendental Numbers.'' §2.6 in
What is Mathematics?: An Elementary Approach to Ideas and Methods, 2nd ed.
Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, pp. 103-107, 1996.
Davis, P. J. ``Leonhard Euler's Integral: A Historical Profile of the Gamma Function.'' Amer. Math. Monthly 66, 849-869, 1959.
Dekking, F. M. ``Transcendence du nombre de Thue-Morse.'' Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences de Paris 285, 157-160, 1977.
Gray, R. ``Georg Cantor and Transcendental Numbers.'' Amer. Math. Monthly 101, 819-832, 1994.
Hardy, G. H. and Wright, E. M. An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers, 5th ed. Oxford,
England: Oxford University Press, 1985.
Le Lionnais, F. Les nombres remarquables. Paris: Hermann, p. 46, 1983.
Siegel, C. L. Transcendental Numbers. New York: Chelsea, 1965.
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© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein