In plane geometry, the Kepler–Bouwkamp constant (or polygon inscribing constant) is obtained as a limit of the following sequence. Take a circle of radius 1. Inscribe a regular triangle in this circle. Inscribe a circle in this triangle. Inscribe a square in it. Inscribe a circle, regular pentagon, circle, regular hexagon and so forth. The radius of the limiting circle is called the Kepler–Bouwkamp constant.[1] It is named after Johannes Kepler and Christoffel Bouwkamp , and is the inverse of the polygon circumscribing constant.
Numerical value
editThe decimal expansion of the Kepler–Bouwkamp constant is (sequence A085365 in the OEIS)
- The natural logarithm of the Kepler-Bouwkamp constant is given by
where is the Riemann zeta function.
If the product is taken over the odd primes, the constant
References
edit- ^ Finch, S. R. (2003). Mathematical Constants. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521818056. MR 2003519.
Further reading
edit- Kitson, Adrian R. (2006). "The prime analog of the Kepler–Bouwkamp constant". arXiv:math/0608186.
- Kitson, Adrian R. (2008). "The prime analogue of the Kepler-Bouwkamp constant". The Mathematical Gazette. 92: 293. doi:10.1017/S0025557200183214. S2CID 117950145.
- Doslic, Tomislav (2014). "Kepler-Bouwkamp radius of combinatorial sequences". Journal of Integer Sequence. 17: 14.11.3.