Problem #57
Difficulty: 5%
Square Root Convergents
Solution Language: Java
Problem Statement
It is possible to show that the square root of two can be expressed as an infinite continued fraction.
√2 = 1 + 1/(2 + 1/(2 + 1/(2 + … ))) = 1.414213…
By expanding this for the first four iterations, we get:
1 + 1/2 = 3/2 = 1.5 1 + 1/(2 + 1/2) = 7/5 = 1.4 1 + 1/(2 + 1/(2 + 1/2)) = 17/12 = 1.41666… 1 + 1/(2 + 1/(2 + 1/(2 + 1/2))) = 41/29 = 1.41379…
The next three expansions are 99/70, 239/169, and 577/408, but the eighth expansion, 1393/985, is the first example where the number of digits in the numerator exceeds the number of digits in the denominator.
In the first one-thousand expansions, how many fractions contain a numerator with more digits than the denominator?
Approach
The solution involves:
- Generating the continued fraction expansion iteratively
- Using the recurrence relation for numerators and denominators
- Using BigInteger to handle large numbers
- Comparing digit counts for numerator and denominator
- Counting expansions where numerator has more digits