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Irrational numbers associated to sequences without geometric progressions

Published 30 Jul 2013 in math.NT | (1307.8135v1)

Abstract: Let s and k be integers with s \geq 2 and k \geq 2. Let g_k{(s)}(n) denote the cardinality of the largest subset of the set {1,2,..., n} that contains no geometric progression of length k whose common ratio is a power of s. Let r_k(\ell) denote the cardinality of the largest subset of the set {0,1,2,\ldots, \ell -1} that contains no arithmetric progression of length k. The limit [ \lim_{n\rightarrow \infty} \frac{g_k{(s)}(n)}{n} = (s-1) \sum_{m=1}{\infty} \left(\frac{1}{s} \right){\min \left(r_k{-1}(m)\right)} ] exists and converges to an irrational number.

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