From Fibonacci Numbers to Central Limit Type Theorems (1008.3202v3)
Abstract: A beautiful theorem of Zeckendorf states that every integer can be written uniquely as a sum of non-consecutive Fibonacci numbers ${F_n}{n=1}{\infty}$. Lekkerkerker proved that the average number of summands for integers in $[F_n, F{n+1})$ is $n/(\phi2 + 1)$, with $\phi$ the golden mean. This has been generalized to the following: given nonnegative integers $c_1,c_2,...,c_L$ with $c_1,c_L>0$ and recursive sequence ${H_n}{n=1}{\infty}$ with $H_1=1$, $H{n+1} =c_1H_n+c_2H_{n-1}+...+c_nH_1+1$ $(1\le n< L)$ and $H_{n+1}=c_1H_n+c_2H_{n-1}+...+c_LH_{n+1-L}$ $(n\geq L)$, every positive integer can be written uniquely as $\sum a_iH_i$ under natural constraints on the $a_i$'s, the mean and the variance of the numbers of summands for integers in $[H_{n}, H_{n+1})$ are of size $n$, and the distribution of the numbers of summands converges to a Gaussian as $n$ goes to the infinity. Previous approaches used number theory or ergodic theory. We convert the problem to a combinatorial one. In addition to re-deriving these results, our method generalizes to a multitude of other problems (in the sequel paper \cite{BM} we show how this perspective allows us to determine the distribution of gaps between summands in decompositions). For example, it is known that every integer can be written uniquely as a sum of the $\pm F_n$'s, such that every two terms of the same (opposite) sign differ in index by at least 4 (3). The presence of negative summands introduces complications and features not seen in previous problems. We prove that the distribution of the numbers of positive and negative summands converges to a bivariate normal with computable, negative correlation, namely $-(21-2\phi)/(29+2\phi) \approx -0.551058$.