Liouville number
In number theory, a Liouville number is a real number x with the property that, for any positive integer n, there exist integers p and q with q > 1 and such that
- 0 < |x - p/q| < 1/qn.
It is relatively easily proven that if x is a Liouville number, x is irrational. Assume otherwise; then there exists integers c, d with x = c/d. Let n be a positive integer such that 2n-1 > d. Then if p and q are integers such that q>1 and p/q ≠ c/d, then
- |x - p/q| = |c/d - p/q| ≥ 1/dq > 1/(2n-1 q) ≥ 1/qn
In 1844, Joseph Liouville showed that numbers of with this property are not just irrational, but are always transcendental (see proof below). He used this result to provide the first example of a provably transcendental number,
More generally, the irrationality measure of a real number x is a measure of how "closely" a number can be approximated by rationals. Instead of allowing any n in the power of q, we find the least upper bound of the set of real numbers μ such that
- 0 < |x - p/q| < 1/qμ
The Liouville numbers are precisely those numbers having infinite irrationality measure.
Proof of Transcendental Property of Liouville Numbers
The proof proceeds by first establishing a property of irrational algebraic numbers. This property essentially says that irrational algebraic numbers cannot be well approximated by rational numbers. A Liouville number is irrational but does not have this property, so it can't be algebraic and must be transcendental.
Lemma: If α is an irrational number which is the root of a polynomial f of degree n > 0 with integer coefficients, then there exists a real number A > 0 such that, for all integers p, q, with q > 0,
- |α - p/q| > A/qn
- A < min(1, 1/M, |α - α1|, |α - α2|, ..., |α - αm|)
- |α - p/q| <= A/qn <= A < min(1, |α - α1|, |α - α2|, ..., |α - αm|)
By the mean value theorem, there exists an x0 between p/q and α such that
- f(α) - f(p/q) = (α - p/q) · f ′(x0)
- |(α - p/q)| = |f(α) - f(p/q)| / |f ′(x0)| = |f(p/q)| / |f ′(x0)|
- |f(p/q)| = |∑i = 1 to n ci piq-i| = |∑i = 1 to n ci piqn-i| / qn ≥ 1/qn
Thus we have that |f(p/q)| ≥ 1/qn. Since |f ′(x0)| ≤ M by the definition of M, and 1/M > A by the definition of A, we have that
- |(α - p/q)| = |f(p/q)| / |f ′(x0)| ≥ 1/(M qn) > A/qn ≥ |(α - p/q)|
Proof of assertion: As a consequence of this lemma, let x be a Liouville number; as noted in the article text, x is then irrational. If x is algebraic, then by the lemma, there exists some integer n and some positive real A such that for all p, q
- |x - p/q| > A/qn
- |x - a/b| < 1/bm = 1/br+n = 1/(brbn) ≤ 1/(2rbn) ≤ A/bn
External Links
- The Beginning of Transcendental Numbers http://www.math.sc.edu/~filaseta/gradcourses/Math785/Math785Notes5.pdf


