2. The Researches of M. E. de Jonquières on Periodic Continued Fractions

1884 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 389-398
Author(s):  
Thomas Muir

1. During the present year there has appeared at intervals, in the Comptes Rendus of the French Academy, quite a series of communications by M. E. de Jonquieres, on the subject of those periodic continued fractions which are the equivalents of the square roots of integers. These communications have attracted attention, both on account of the number of results given in them, and because, as a writer in the Bulletin des Sciences Mathématiques says, of their interesting and profound character. To any one really intimate with the bibliography of the subject, this cannot but be a little surprising. It is true that the number of so-called theorems is great; but the very special character of a number of them, the fact that they are just such theorems as may be obtained by experiment and induction, and the want of demonstrations of them as evidence that the author was in possession of a mathematical theory of the subject, are points that have been too much overlooked. Further, and what is more important, many of the theorems are not new, and there is a sense in which the epithet “new” cannot fairly be applied to any of the earlier ones, because of the existence of a widely general theorem in which they are directly included, or from which they may with readiness be deduced.

1904 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 380-386
Author(s):  
Thomas Muir

There is a short paper in a recent volume of the Comptes Rendus of the French Academy of Sciences which deserves notice if only in order that the attention of the author and others may be drawn to previous work on the same subject and to more effective methods of treatment.


1832 ◽  
Vol 122 ◽  
pp. 539-574 ◽  

I have for some time entertained an opinion, in common with some others who have turned their attention tot he subject, that a good series of observations with a Water-Barometer, accurately constructed, might throw some light upon several important points of physical science: amongst others, upon the tides of the atmosphere; the horary oscillations of the counterpoising column; the ascending and descending rate of its greater oscillations; and the tension of vapour at different atmospheric temperatures. I have sought in vain in various scientific works, and in the Transactions of Philosophical Societies, for the record of any such observations, or for a description of an instrument calculated to afford the required information with anything approaching to precision. In the first volume of the History of the French Academy of Sciences, a cursory reference is made, in the following words, to some experiments of M. Mariotte upon the subject, of which no particulars appear to have been preserved. “Le même M. Mariotte fit aussi à l’observatoire des experiences sur le baromètre ordinaire à mercure comparé au baromètre à eau. Dans l’un le mercure s’eléva à 28 polices, et dans Fautre l’eau fut a 31 pieds Cequi donne le rapport du mercure à l’eau de 13½ à 1.” Histoire de I'Acadérmie, tom. i. p. 234. It also appears that Otto Guricke constructed a philosophical toy for the amusement of himself and friends, upon the principle of the water-barometer; but the column of water probably in this, as in all the other instances which I have met with, was raised by the imperfect rarefaction of the air in the tube above it, or by filling with water a metallic tube, of sufficient length, cemented to a glass one at its upper extremity, and fitted with a stop-cock at each end; so that when full the upper one might be closed and the lower opened, when the water would fall till it afforded an equipoise to the pressure of the atmo­sphere. The imperfections of such an instrument, it is quite clear, would render it totally unfit for the delicate investigations required in the present state of science; as, to render the observations of any value, it is absolutely necessary that the water should be thoroughly purged of air, by boiling, and its insinuation or reabsorption effectually guarded against. I was convinced that the only chance of securing these two necessary ends, was to form the whole length of tube of one piece of glass, and to boil the water in it, as is done with mercury in the common barometer. The practical difficulties which opposed themselves to such a construction long appeared to me insurmount­able; but I at length contrived a plan for the purpose, which, having been honoured with the approval of the late Meteorological Committee of this Society, was ordered to be carried into execution by the President and Council.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Del Rajan

<p>In this thesis, we explore the subject of complex spacetimes, in which the mathematical theory of complex manifolds gets modified for application to General Relativity. We will also explore the mysterious Newman-Janis trick, which is an elementary and quite short method to obtain the Kerr black hole from the Schwarzschild black hole through the use of complex variables. This exposition will cover variations of the Newman-Janis trick, partial explanations, as well as original contributions.</p>


1821 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 222-267 ◽  

It has not unfrequently of late been made a subject of re­proach to mathematicians who have occupied themselves with the theory of the refracting telescope, that the practical be­nefit derived from their speculations has been by no means commensurate to the expenditure of analytical skill and labour they have called for, and that from all the abstruse researches of Clairaut, Euler, D'Alembert, and other celebrated geometers, nothing hitherto has resulted beyond a mass of complicated formulæ, which, though confessedly exact in theory, have never yet been made the basis of con­struction for a single good instrument, and remain therefore totally inapplicable, or at least unapplied, in practice. The simplest considerations, indeed, suffice for the correction of that part of the aberration which arises from the different refrangibility of the differently coloured rays; and accord­ingly, this part of the mathematical theory of refracting telescopes was soon brought to perfection, and has received no important accession since the original invention of the achromatic object-glass. Indeed the theoretical considera­tions advanced on this part of the subject by Euler and D'Alembert have even had a tendency to retard its advancement, by appearing to establish relations among the relative refractive powers of media on rays of different colours which later experimental researches have exploded.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 545-560
Author(s):  
LUKA MILINKOVIC ◽  
BRANKO MALESEVIC ◽  
BOJAN BANJAC

The subject of this paper is the current state of art in theory of continued fractions, intermediate fractions and their relation to the best rational approximations of the first and second kind. The paper provides an overview of the some well known and even some new properties of continued fractions, and the various terms associated with them. In addition to intermediate fractions, paper considers the fine intermediate fractions and gave some statements to position these fractions in the continued fraction representation of numbers.


Author(s):  
Eric R. Scerri

The question of the reduction of chemistry to quantum mechanics has been inextricably linked with the development of the philosophy of chemistry since the field began to develop in the early 1990s. In the present chapter I would like to describe how my own views on the subject have developed over a period of roughly 30 years. A good place to begin might be the frequently cited reductionist dictum that was penned in 1929 by Paul Dirac, one of the founders of quantum mechanics. . . . The underlying laws necessary for the mathematical theory of a larger part of physics and the whole of chemistry are thus completely known, and the difficulty is only that exact applications of these laws lead to equations, which are too complicated to be soluble. (Dirac 1929) . . . These days most chemists would probably comment that Dirac had things backward. It is clear that nothing like “the whole of chemistry” has been mathematically understood. At the same time most would argue that the approximate solutions that are afforded by modern computers are so good as to overcome the fact that one cannot obtain exact or analytical solutions to the Schrödinger equation for many-electron systems. Be that as it may, Dirac’s famous quotation, coming from one of the creators of quantum mechanics, has convinced many people that chemistry has been more or less completely reduced to quantum mechanics. Another quotation of this sort (and one using more metaphorical language) comes from Walter Heitler who together with Fritz London was the first to give a quantum mechanical description of the chemical bond. . . . Let us assume for the moment that the two atomic systems ↑↑↑↑ . . . and ↓↓↓↓ . . . are always attracted in a homopolar manner. We can, then, eat Chemistry with a spoon. (Heitler 1927) . . . Philosophers of science eventually caught up with this climate of reductionism and chose to illustrate their views with the relationship with chemistry and quantum mechanics.


10.14311/1821 ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
L'ubomíra Balková ◽  
Aranka Hrušková

In this paper, we will first summarize known results concerning continued fractions. Then we will limit our consideration to continued fractions of quadratic numbers. The second author describes periods and sometimes the precise form of continued fractions of ?N, where N is a natural number. In cases where we have been able to find such results in the literature, we recall the original authors, however many results seem to be new.


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