PELL NUMBER

In mathematics, the 'Pell numbers' and 'companion Pell numbers (Pell-Lucas numbers)' are both sequences of integers that have been known since ancient times. They are defined by a recurrence relation similar to that for the Fibonacci numbers, and grow exponentially, proportionally to powers of the silver ratio. Pell numbers arise in the approximation of the square root of 2, in the definition of square triangular numbers, in the construction of nearly-isosceles integer right triangles, and in certain combinatorial enumeration problems.[1]
As with Pell's equation, the name of the Pell numbers stems from Leonhard Euler's mistaken attribution of the equation and the numbers derived from it to John Pell. The Pell-Lucas numbers are also named after Edouard Lucas, who studied sequences defined by recurrences of this type; the Pell and companion Pell numbers are Lucas sequences.

Contents
Pell numbers
Approximation to the square root of two
Primes and squares
Pythagorean triples
Companion Pell numbers (Pell-Lucas numbers)
Notes
References
External links

Pell numbers


The Pell numbers are defined by the recurrence relation
:P_n=egin{cases}0&mbox{if }n=0;\1&mbox{if }n=1;\2P_{n-1}+P_{n-2}&mbox{otherwise.}end{cases}
In words, the sequence of Pell numbers starts with 0 and 1, and then each Pell number is the sum of twice the previous Pell number and the Pell number before that. The first few terms of the sequence are
:, 1, 2, 5, 12, 29, 70, 169, 408, 985, 2378... .
The Pell numbers can also be expressed by the closed form formula
:P_n= rac{(1+sqrt2)^n-(1-sqrt2)^n}{2sqrt2}.
For large values of ''n'', the scriptstyle (1+sqrt 2)^n term dominates this expression, so the Pell numbers are approximately proportional to powers of the silver ratio scriptstyle (1+sqrt 2), analogous to the growth rate of Fibonacci numbers as powers of the golden ratio.
A third definition is possible, from the matrix formula
:egin{pmatrix} P_{n+1} & P_n \ P_n & P_{n-1} end{pmatrix} = egin{pmatrix} 2 & 1 \ 1 & 0 end{pmatrix}^n.
Many identities can be derived or proven from these definitions; for instance an identity analogous to Cassini's identity for Fibonacci numbers,
:P_{n+1}P_{n-1}-P_n^2 = (-1)^n,
is an immediate consequence of the matrix formula (found by considering determinants).[2]

Approximation to the square root of two


Rational approximations to regular octagons, with coordinates derived from the Pell numbers.

Pell numbers arise historically and most notably in the rational approximation to the square root of 2. If two large integers ''x'' and ''y'' form a solution to the Pell equation
:displaystyle x^2-2y^2=pm 1,
then their ratio frac{x}{y} provides a close approximation to scriptstylesqrt 2. The sequence of approximations of this form is
:1, rac32, rac75, rac{17}{12}, rac{41}{29}, rac{99}{70}, dots
where the denominator of each fraction is a Pell number and the numerator is the sum of a Pell number and its predecessor in the sequence. That is, the solutions have the form frac{P_{n-1}+P_n}{P_n}. The approximation
:sqrt 2pprox rac{577}{408}
of this type was known to Indian mathematicians in the third or fourth century B.C.[3] The Greek mathematicians of the fifth century B.C. also knew of this sequence of approximations[4]; they called the denominators and numerators of this sequence 'side and diameter numbers' and the numerators were also known as 'rational diagonals' or 'rational diameters'.[5]
These approximations can be derived from the continued fraction expansion of scriptstylesqrt 2:
:sqrt 2 = 1 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{ddots,}}}}}.
Truncating this expansion to any number of terms produces one of the Pell-number-based approximations in this sequence; for instance,
: rac{577}{408} = 1 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2 + cfrac{1}{2}}}}}}}.
As Knuth (1994) describes, the fact that Pell numbers approximate scriptstylesqrt 2 allows them to be used for accurate rational approximations to a regular octagon with vertex coordinates (pm P_i,pm P_{i+1}) and (pm P_{i+1},pm P_i). All vertices are equally distant from the origin, and form nearly uniform angles around the origin. Alternatively, the points (pm(P_i+P_{i-1}),0), (0,pm(P_i+P_{i-1})), and (pm P_i,pm P_i) form approximate octagons in which the vertices are nearly equally distant from the origin and form uniform angles.

Primes and squares


A 'Pell prime' is a Pell number that is prime. The first few Pell primes are
:2, 5, 29, 5741, ... .
As with the Fibonacci numbers, a Pell number P_n can only be prime if ''n'' itself is prime.
The only Pell numbers that are squares, cubes, or any higher power of another integer are 0, 1, and 169 = 132.[6]
However, despite having so few squares or other powers, Pell numbers have a close connection to square triangular numbers.[7] Specifically, these numbers arise from the following identity of Pell numbers:
:igl((P_{k-1}+P_k)cdot P_kigr)^2 = rac{(P_{k-1}+P_k)^2cdotleft((P_{k-1}+P_k)^2-(-1)^k
ight)}{2}.
The left side of this identity describes a square number, while the right side describes a triangular number, so the result is a square triangular number.
Santana and Diaz-Barrero (2006) prove another identity relating Pell numbers to squares and showing that the sum of the Pell numbers up to P_{4n+1} is always a square:
:sum_{i=0}^{4n+1} P_i = left(sum_{r=0}^n 2^r{2n+1choose 2r}
ight)^2 = (P_{2n}+P_{2n+1})^2.
For instance, the sum of the Pell numbers up to P_5, 0+1+2+5+12+29=49, is the square of P_2+P_3=2+5=7. The numbers P_{2n}+P_{2n+1} forming the square roots of these sums,
:1, 7, 41, 239, 1393, 8119, 47321, ... ,
are known as the NSW numbers.

Pythagorean triples



If a right triangle has integer side lengths ''a'', ''b'', ''c'' (necessarily satisfying the Pythagorean theorem ''a''2+''b''2=''c''2), then (''a'',''b'',''c'') is known as a Pythagorean triple. As Martin (1875) describes, the Pell numbers can be used to form Pythagorean triples in which ''a'' and ''b'' are one unit apart, corresponding to right triangles that are nearly isosceles. Each such triple has the form
:(2P_{n}P_{n+1}, P_{n+1}^2 - P_{n}^2, P_{n+1}^2 + P_{n}^2=P_{2n+1}).
The sequence of Pythagorean triples formed in this way is
:(4,3,5), (20,21,29), (120,119,169), (696,697,985), ...

Companion Pell numbers (Pell-Lucas numbers)


The 'companion Pell numbers' or 'Pell-Lucas numbers' are defined by the recurrence relation
:Q_n=egin{cases}2&mbox{if }n=0;\2&mbox{if }n=1;\2Q_{n-1}+Q_{n-2}&mbox{otherwise.}end{cases}
In words: the first two numbers in the sequence are both 2, and each successive number is formed by adding twice the previous Pell-Lucas number to the Pell-Lucas number before that. The first few terms of the sequence are : 2, 2, 6, 14, 34, 82, 198, 478...
The companion Pell numbers can be expressed by the closed form formula
:Q_n=(1+sqrt 2)^n+(1-sqrt 2)^n.
These numbers are all even; each such number is twice the numerator in one of the rational approximations to scriptstylesqrt 2 discussed above.

Notes


1. For instance, Sellers (2002) proves that the number of perfect matchings in the Cartesian product of a path graph and the graph ''K''4-''e'' can be calculated as the product of a Pell number with the corresponding Fibonacci number.
2. For the matrix formula and its consequences see Ercolano (1979) and Kilic and Tasci (2005). Additional identities for the Pell numbers are listed by Horadam (1971) and Bicknell (1975).
3. As recorded in the Shulba Sutras; see e.g. Dutka (1986), who cites Thibaut (1875) for this information.
4. See Knorr (1976) for the fifth century date, which matches Proclus' claim that the side and diameter numbers were discovered by the Pythagoreans. For more detailed exploration of later Greek knowledge of these numbers see Thompson (1929), Vedova (1951), Ridenhour (1986), Knorr (1998), and Filep (1999).
5. For instance, as several of the references from the previous note observe, in Plato's Republic there is a reference to the "rational diameter of 5", by which Plato means 7, the numerator of the approximation 7/5 of which 5 is the denominator.
6. Pethő (1992); Cohn (1996). Although the Fibonacci numbers are defined by a very similar recurrence to the Pell numbers, Cohn writes that an analogous result for the Fibonacci numbers seems much more difficult to prove.
7. Sesskin (1962). See the square triangular number article for a more detailed derivation.

References




★ {{cite journal
| author = Bicknell, Marjorie
| title = A primer on the Pell sequence and related sequences
| journal = Fibonacci Quarterly
| volume = 13
| year = 1975
| issue = 4
| pages = 345–349
| id =

★ {{cite journal
| author = Cohn, J. H. E.
| title = Perfect Pell powers
| journal = Glasgow Mathematical Journal
| volume = 38
| year = 1996
| issue = 1
| pages = 19–20
| id =

★ {{cite journal
| author = Dutka, Jacques
| title = On square roots and their representations
| journal = Archive for History of Exact Sciences
| volume = 36
| issue = 1
| year = 1986
| pages = 21–39
| doi = 10.1007/BF00357439
| id =

★ {{cite journal
| author = Ercolano, Joseph
| title = Matrix generators of Pell sequences
| journal = Fibonacci Quarterly
| volume = 17
| year = 1979
| issue = 1
| pages = 71–77
| id =

Pythagorean side and diagonal numbers, Filep, László, , , Acta Mathematica Academiae Paedagogiace Nyíregyháziensis, 1999

★ {{cite journal
| author = Horadam, A. F.
| title = Pell identities
| journal = Fibonacci Quarterly
| volume = 9
| year = 1971
| issue = 3
| pages = 245–252, 263
| id =

★ {{cite journal
| author = Kilic, Emrah; Tasci, Dursun
| title = The linear algebra of the Pell matrix
| journal = Boletín de la Sociedad Matemática Mexicana, Tercera Serie
| volume = 11
| year = 2005
| issue = 2
| pages = 163–174
| id =

★ {{cite journal
| author = Knorr, Wilbur
| authorlink = Wilbur Knorr
| title = Archimedes and the measurement of the circle: A new interpretation
| journal = Archive for History of Exact Sciences
| volume = 15
| issue = 2
| year = 1976
| pages = 115–140
| doi = 10.1007/BF00348496
| id =

"Rational diameters" and the discovery of incommensurability, Knorr, Wilbur, , , American Mathematical Monthly, 1998

★ {{cite journal
| author = Knuth, Donald E.
| authorlink = Donald Knuth
| title = Leaper graphs
| journal = The Mathematical Gazette
| volume = 78
| year = 1994
| pages = 274–297
| id =

Rational right angled triangles nearly isosceles, Martin, Artemas, , , The Analyst, 1875

★ {{cite conference
| author = Pethő, A.
| title = The Pell sequence contains only trivial perfect powers
| booktitle = Sets, graphs, and numbers (Budapest, 1991)
| publisher = Colloq. Math. Soc. János Bolyai, 60, North-Holland
| date = 1992
| pages = 561–568
| id =

Ladder approximations of irrational numbers, Ridenhour, J. R., , , Mathematics Magazine, 1986

Some properties of sums involving Pell numbers, Santana, S. F.; Diaz-Barrero, J. L., , , Missouri Journal of Mathematical Sciences, 2006

★ {{cite journal
| author = Sellers, James A.
| title = Domino tilings and products of Fibonacci and Pell numbers
| year = 2002
| journal = Journal of Integer Sequences
| volume = 5
| url = http://www.emis.de/journals/JIS/VOL5/Sellers/sellers4.pdf
| id =

A "converse" to Fermat's last theorem?, Sesskin, Sam, , , Mathematics Magazine, 1962

On the Súlvasútras, Thibaut, George, , , Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1875

III.—Excess and defect: or the little more and the little less, Thompson, D'Arcy Wentworth, , , Mind: New Series, 1929

Notes on Theon of Smyrna, Vedova, G. C., , , American Mathematical Monthly, 1951

External links





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