In mathematics, a continued fraction is
an expression obtained through an iterative process of representing a number as the
sum of its integer part and the reciprocal of another number, then
writing this other number as the sum of its integer part and another
reciprocal, and so on. In a finite continued fraction (or terminated
continued fraction), the iteration/recursion is terminated after finitely many steps
by using an integer in lieu of another continued fraction. In contrast,
an infinite continued fraction is an infinite expression. In either case, all integers in the
sequence, other than the first, must be positive. The integers ai are called the coefficients or terms of the continued fraction.
Continued fractions have a number of
remarkable properties related to the Euclidean algorithm for
integers or real numbers. Every rational
number
(p/q) has two closely related
expressions as a finite continued fraction, whose coefficients ai can be determined by applying
the Euclidean algorithm to (p,q). The
numerical value of an infinite continued fraction is irrational; it is defined from its infinite sequence of
integers as the limit of a sequence of values for
finite continued fractions. Each finite continued fraction of the sequence is
obtained by using a finite prefix of the infinite continued fraction's
defining sequence of integers. Moreover, every irrational number ᾳ is the value of a unique infinite
continued fraction, whose coefficients can be found using the non-terminating
version of the Euclidean algorithm applied to the incommensurable values ᾳ and 1. This way of expressing real numbers
(rational and irrational) is called their continued fraction
representation.
It is generally assumed that
the numerator of all of the fractions is
1. If arbitrary values and/or functions are used in place of one or
more of the numerators or the integers in the denominators, the resulting
expression is a generalized continued fraction. When it is necessary to distinguish the
first form from generalized continued fractions, the former may be called
a simple or regular continued fraction, or said to
be in canonical form.
The term continued
fraction may also refer to representations of rational
functions, arising in their analytic
theory. For this use of the term,
see Padé approximation and Chebyshev rational functions.
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