%I #17 Aug 11 2015 17:39:34
%S 1,3,7,4,8,0,2,2,2,7,4,3,9,3,5,8,6,3,1,7,8,2,8,2,1,8,7,9,2,0,9,6,5,7,
%T 2,5,6,9,8,6,3,0,7,7,5,9,4,6,7,3,6,6,6,6,5,4,4,1,7,6,0,5,0,9,3,9,7,5,
%U 2,1,1,0,5,0,6,2,6,3,6,3,4,2,8,2,6,0,8,6,7,4,0,1,1,5,3,2,8,8,7,7,9,3,3,8,3
%N Decimal expansion of e^(1/Pi).
%H Karl V. Keller, Jr., <a href="/A179706/b179706.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..1000</a>
%F log(this number) = A049541. - _R. J. Mathar_, Jul 28 2010
%e e^(1/Pi) = 1.37480222743935863178...
%e 1.3748022274... = 1 + A049541 + A092742/2! + A092743/3! + A092744/4! + A092745/5! + ... - _R. J. Mathar_, Jul 28 2010
%p x := exp(1)^(1/Pi) ; x := evalf(x) ; # _R. J. Mathar_, Jul 28 2010
%t RealDigits[N[E^(1/Pi),200]][[1]] (* _Vladimir Joseph Stephan Orlovsky_, Jan 27 2012 *)
%Y Cf. A001113 (decimal expansion of e, Euler's number), A000796 (decimal expansion of Pi).
%K cons,nonn
%O 1,2
%A Bronte Harkaitz (bronteharkaitz(AT)yahoo.com), Jul 25 2010
%E Edited and extended by _Klaus Brockhaus_, Jul 29 2010
%E More digits from _R. J. Mathar_, Jul 28 2010
|