Fibonacci Numbers
From Math Images
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| - | |ImageName=Fibonacci | + | |ImageName=Fibonacci numbers in a sea shell |
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| - | |ImageIntro=The spiral curve of the Nautilus sea shell follows the pattern of a spiral drawn in a Fibonacci rectangle, a collection of squares with sides that have the length of Fibonacci numbers. | + | |ImageIntro=The spiral curve of the Nautilus sea shell follows the pattern of a spiral drawn in a Fibonacci rectangle, a collection of squares with sides that have the length of Fibonacci numbers |
| - | |ImageDescElem=The Fibonacci sequence is the sequence | + | . |
| + | |ImageDescElem=The Fibonacci sequence is the sequence where the first two numbers are 1s and every later number is the sum of the two previous numbers. So, given two <math>1</math>'s as the first two terms, the next terms of the sequence follows as : <math>1+1=2, 1+2=3, 2+3=5, 3+5=8, \dots</math> | ||
{{Anchor|Reference=1|Link=[[Image:sunflower.jpg|Image 1|thumb|500px|left]]}} | {{Anchor|Reference=1|Link=[[Image:sunflower.jpg|Image 1|thumb|500px|left]]}} | ||
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The problem was to find out how many pairs of rabbits there will be after one year. | The problem was to find out how many pairs of rabbits there will be after one year. | ||
| - | {{Anchor|Reference=2|Link=[[Image:Rabbit.png|Image 2|thumb|300px|right | + | {{Anchor|Reference=2|Link=[[Image:Rabbit.png|Image 2|thumb|300px|right]]}} |
On January 1st, there is only 1 pair. On February 1st, this baby rabbits matured to be grown up rabbits, but they have not reproduced, so there will only be the original pair present. | On January 1st, there is only 1 pair. On February 1st, this baby rabbits matured to be grown up rabbits, but they have not reproduced, so there will only be the original pair present. | ||
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Fibonacci numbers appear in the arrangement of leaves in certain plants. Take a plant, locate the lowest leaf and number that leaf as 0. Number the leaves by order of creation starting from 0, as shown in [[#3|Image 3]]. Then, count the number of leaves you encounter until you reach the next leaf that is directly above and pointing in the same direction as the lowest leaf, which is the leaf with number 8 in this image. The number of leaves you pass, in this case, 8, will be a Fibonacci number. | Fibonacci numbers appear in the arrangement of leaves in certain plants. Take a plant, locate the lowest leaf and number that leaf as 0. Number the leaves by order of creation starting from 0, as shown in [[#3|Image 3]]. Then, count the number of leaves you encounter until you reach the next leaf that is directly above and pointing in the same direction as the lowest leaf, which is the leaf with number 8 in this image. The number of leaves you pass, in this case, 8, will be a Fibonacci number. | ||
{{Anchor|Reference=3|Link=[[Image:fibonacileaf.png|Image 3|thumb|150px|right]]}} | {{Anchor|Reference=3|Link=[[Image:fibonacileaf.png|Image 3|thumb|150px|right]]}} | ||
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Moreover, the number of rotations you make around the stem until you reach that leaf will also be a Fibonacci number. You make rotations up the stem by following ascending order of the leaf's number. In the image, if you follow the red arrows, the number of rotations you make until you reach 8 will be 5, which is a Fibonacci number. | Moreover, the number of rotations you make around the stem until you reach that leaf will also be a Fibonacci number. You make rotations up the stem by following ascending order of the leaf's number. In the image, if you follow the red arrows, the number of rotations you make until you reach 8 will be 5, which is a Fibonacci number. | ||
In [[#4|Image 4]], the leaf that is pointing in the same direction as the lowest leaf 0 is the leaf number 13. The number of leaves in between these two leaves is 13, which is a Fibonacci number. Moreover, going up the stem in a clockwise direction, such that we follow leaves 0, 1, 2, ..., 13, we make 8 rotations, and going up the stem in a counterclockwise direction, we make 5 rotations. The number of clockwise rotations and the number of counterclockwise rotations are always consecutive Fibonacci numbers. | In [[#4|Image 4]], the leaf that is pointing in the same direction as the lowest leaf 0 is the leaf number 13. The number of leaves in between these two leaves is 13, which is a Fibonacci number. Moreover, going up the stem in a clockwise direction, such that we follow leaves 0, 1, 2, ..., 13, we make 8 rotations, and going up the stem in a counterclockwise direction, we make 5 rotations. The number of clockwise rotations and the number of counterclockwise rotations are always consecutive Fibonacci numbers. | ||
| - | {{Anchor|Reference=4|Link=[[Image:leave.png|Image 4|thumb|250px]]}} | + | {{Anchor|Reference=4|Link=[[Image:leave.png|Image 4|thumb|250px|none]]}} |
===Spirals=== | ===Spirals=== | ||
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Fibonacci numbers can be seen in nature through spiral forms that can be constructed by Fibonacci rectangles as shown in [[#5|Image 5]]. Fibonacci rectangles are rectangles that are built so that the ratio of the length to the width is the proportion of two consecutive Fibonacci numbers. | Fibonacci numbers can be seen in nature through spiral forms that can be constructed by Fibonacci rectangles as shown in [[#5|Image 5]]. Fibonacci rectangles are rectangles that are built so that the ratio of the length to the width is the proportion of two consecutive Fibonacci numbers. | ||
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We can build Fibonacci rectangles first by drawing two squares with length 1 next to each other. Then, we draw a new square with length 2 that is touching the sides of the original two squares. We draw another square with length 3 that is touching one unit square and the latest square with length 2. We can build Fibonacci rectangles by continuing to draw new squares that have the same length as the sum of the length of the latest two squares. | We can build Fibonacci rectangles first by drawing two squares with length 1 next to each other. Then, we draw a new square with length 2 that is touching the sides of the original two squares. We draw another square with length 3 that is touching one unit square and the latest square with length 2. We can build Fibonacci rectangles by continuing to draw new squares that have the same length as the sum of the length of the latest two squares. | ||
After building Fibonacci rectangles, we can draw a spiral in the squares, each square containing a quarter of a circle. Such spiral is called the Fibonacci spiral, and it can be seen in sea shells, snails, the spirals of the galaxy, and other parts of nature, as shown in [[#6|Image 6]] and [[#7|Image 7]]. | After building Fibonacci rectangles, we can draw a spiral in the squares, each square containing a quarter of a circle. Such spiral is called the Fibonacci spiral, and it can be seen in sea shells, snails, the spirals of the galaxy, and other parts of nature, as shown in [[#6|Image 6]] and [[#7|Image 7]]. | ||
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| + | {{Anchor|Reference=6|Link=[[Image:shell.jpg|Image 6|thumb|170px|left]]}} | ||
{{Anchor|Reference=7|Link=[[Image:galaxy.jpg|Image 7|thumb|250px|none]]}} | {{Anchor|Reference=7|Link=[[Image:galaxy.jpg|Image 7|thumb|250px|none]]}} | ||
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===Ancestry of Bees=== | ===Ancestry of Bees=== | ||
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[[image:bees.jpg|thumb|Image 8|400px|none]] | [[image:bees.jpg|thumb|Image 8|400px|none]] | ||
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|ImageDesc===Symbolic Definition of Fibonacci Sequence== | |ImageDesc===Symbolic Definition of Fibonacci Sequence== | ||
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[[image:identity1.gif|thumb|Image 9|none|600px]] | [[image:identity1.gif|thumb|Image 9|none|600px]] | ||
| - | {{ | + | {{SwitchPreview|ShowMessage=Click here to show proof.|HideMessage=Click here to hide proof.|PreviewText= |
| - | | | + | :<math>{\color{Gray}F_1=F_3-F_2}</math> |
| + | :<math>{\color{Gray}F_1=F_3-F_2}</math> | ||
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| + | :<math>{\color{Gray}\dots}</math> | ||
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:<math>F_1=F_3-F_2</math> | :<math>F_1=F_3-F_2</math> | ||
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[[image:fidentity2.gif|thumb|Image 10|none|800px]] | [[image:fidentity2.gif|thumb|Image 10|none|800px]] | ||
| - | {{ | + | {{SwitchPreview|ShowMessage=Click here to show proof.|HideMessage=Click here to hide proof.|PreviewText= |
| - | | | + | :<math>{\color{Gray}F_1=F_2}</math> |
| + | :<math>{\color{Gray}F_3=F_4-F_2}</math> | ||
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| + | :<math>{\color{Gray}\dots}</math> | ||
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:<math>F_1=F_2</math> | :<math>F_1=F_2</math> | ||
:<math>F_3=F_4-F_2</math> | :<math>F_3=F_4-F_2</math> | ||
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[[image:identity3.gif|thumb|Image 11|none|600px]] | [[image:identity3.gif|thumb|Image 11|none|600px]] | ||
| - | To see the proof, click below. | + | To see the proof, <span class="plainlinks">[http://xstretchmarks.com/how-to-get-rid-of-stretch-marks/ <span style="color:black;font-weight:normal;text-decoration:none!important;background:none!important; text-decoration:none;">click</span>]</span> below. |
| - | {{ | + | {{SwitchPreview|ShowMessage=Click here to show proof.|HideMessage=Click here to hide proof.|PreviewText= |
| - | | | + | Subtracting Eq. (2), the sum of Fibonacci numbers with odd indices, from the sum of the first <math>{\color{Gray}2n}</math> Fibonacci numbers, we |
| + | |FullText= | ||
Subtracting {{EquationNote|Eq. (2)}}, the sum of Fibonacci numbers with odd indices, from the sum of the first <math>2n</math> Fibonacci numbers, we get the identity of the sum of Fibonacci numbers with even indices. | Subtracting {{EquationNote|Eq. (2)}}, the sum of Fibonacci numbers with odd indices, from the sum of the first <math>2n</math> Fibonacci numbers, we get the identity of the sum of Fibonacci numbers with even indices. | ||
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The sum of the squares of the first <math>n</math> Fibonacci numbers is the product of the <math>n^{\rm th}</math> and the <math>{(n+1)}^{\rm th}</math> Fibonacci numbers. | The sum of the squares of the first <math>n</math> Fibonacci numbers is the product of the <math>n^{\rm th}</math> and the <math>{(n+1)}^{\rm th}</math> Fibonacci numbers. | ||
| - | {{Anchor|Reference=12|Link=[[Image: | + | {{Anchor|Reference=12|Link=[[Image:Goldenrectangle_copy.jpg|Image 12|thumb|300px|right]]}} |
:<math>\sum_{i=1}^n {F_i}^2=F_n F_{n+1}</math> | :<math>\sum_{i=1}^n {F_i}^2=F_n F_{n+1}</math> | ||
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This identity can be proved by studying the area of the rectangles in [[#12|Image 12]]. | This identity can be proved by studying the area of the rectangles in [[#12|Image 12]]. | ||
| - | {{ | + | {{SwitchPreview|ShowMessage=Click here to show proof.|HideMessage=Click here to hide proof.|PreviewText=The rectangle is called a Fibonacci rectangle, which is further described in Fibonacci Numbers in Nature. The numbers inside each square indicate the length of one side of the square. Notice that the lengths of the squares are all Fibonacci numbers. |
| - | | | + | |FullText= |
The rectangle is called a Fibonacci rectangle, which is further described in [[Fibonacci_Numbers#Fibonacci_Numbers_in_Nature| Fibonacci Numbers in Nature]]. The numbers inside each square indicate the length of one side of the square. Notice that the lengths of the squares are all Fibonacci numbers. | The rectangle is called a Fibonacci rectangle, which is further described in [[Fibonacci_Numbers#Fibonacci_Numbers_in_Nature| Fibonacci Numbers in Nature]]. The numbers inside each square indicate the length of one side of the square. Notice that the lengths of the squares are all Fibonacci numbers. | ||
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To see the proof for this special case, click below. | To see the proof for this special case, click below. | ||
| - | {{ | + | {{SwitchPreview|ShowMessage=Click here to show proof.|HideMessage=Click here to hide proof.|PreviewText=Assume that <math>{\color{Gray}F_n}</math> and <math>{\color{Gray}F_{n+1}}</math> have some integer k as their common divisor. Then, both |
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| - | Assume that <math> F_n</math> and <math> F_{n+1}</math> have some integer <math>k </math> as their common divisor. Then, both <math> | + | |FullText=Assume that <math> F_n</math> and <math> F_{n+1}</math> have some integer <math>k </math> as their common divisor. Then, both <math> |
F_{n+1}</math> and <math>F_n</math> are each multiples of <math>k</math>: | F_{n+1}</math> and <math>F_n</math> are each multiples of <math>k</math>: | ||
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{{Hide|1= | {{Hide|1= | ||
{{Anchor|Reference=13|Link=[[Image:golden_rectangle_detailed.jpg|Image 13|thumb|150px]]}} | {{Anchor|Reference=13|Link=[[Image:golden_rectangle_detailed.jpg|Image 13|thumb|150px]]}} | ||
| - | The golden ratio appears in paintings, architecture, and in various forms of nature. Two numbers are said to be in the golden ratio if the ratio of the smaller number to the larger number is equal to the ratio of the larger number to the sum of the two numbers. In [[#13|Image 13]], the width of A and B are in the golden ratio if<math> a : b = (a+b) : a</math>. | + | The [[Golden Ratio| golden ratio]] appears in paintings, architecture, and in various forms of nature. Two numbers are said to be in the golden ratio if the ratio of the smaller number to the larger number is equal to the ratio of the larger number to the sum of the two numbers. In [[#13|Image 13]], the width of A and B are in the golden ratio if<math> a : b = (a+b) : a</math>. |
The golden ratio is represented by the Greek lowercase phi ,<math>\varphi</math>, and the exact value is | The golden ratio is represented by the Greek lowercase phi ,<math>\varphi</math>, and the exact value is | ||
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{{Hide|1= | {{Hide|1= | ||
===Fibonacci Numbers and the Mandelbrot Set=== | ===Fibonacci Numbers and the Mandelbrot Set=== | ||
| - | [[image: | + | [[image:Mandelbrot_large.png|left|250px|Image 15|thumb]] |
The Mandelbrot set is a set of points in which the boundary forms a fractal. It is a set of all complex numbers <math>c</math> for which the sequence | The Mandelbrot set is a set of points in which the boundary forms a fractal. It is a set of all complex numbers <math>c</math> for which the sequence | ||
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|Field=Algebra | |Field=Algebra | ||
| - | |References= | + | |References= |
| - | + | Maurer, Stephen B & Ralston, Anthony. (2004) Discrete Algorithmic Mathematics. Massachusetts : A K Peters. | |
| - | + | Posamentier, Alfred S & Lehmann Ingmar. (2007) The Fabulous Fibonacci Numbers. New York : Prometheus Books. | |
| - | + | Vorb'ev, N. N. (1961) Fibonacci Numbers. New York : Blaisdell Publishing Company. | |
| - | + | Hoggatt, Verner E., Jr. (1969) Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers. Boston : Houghton Mifflin Company. | |
| - | http://www. | + | Knott, Ron. (n.d.). The Fibonacci Numbers and Golden Section in Nature. Retrieved from http://www.maths.surrey.ac.uk/hosted-sites/R.Knott/Fibonacci/fibnat.html |
| - | http:// | + | Wikipedia (Golden Ratio). (n.d.). Golden Ratio. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_ratio. |
| - | http://www. | + | Fibonacci Numbers in Nature & the Golden Ratio. (n.d.). In World-Mysteries.com. Retrieved from http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_17.htm |
| - | http:// | + | http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_17.htm |
| - | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbrot_set | + | Wikipedia (Mandelbrot Set). (n.d.). Mandelbrot Set. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbrot_set. |
| + | |||
| + | Devaney, Robert L. (2006) Unveiling the Mandelbrot Set. Retrieved from http://plus.maths.org/issue40/features/devaney/. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Weisstein, Eric W. (n.d.). Mandelbrot Set. In MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. Retrieved from http://mathworld.wolfram.com/MandelbrotSet.html. | ||
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|Field=Number Theory | |Field=Number Theory | ||
|ToDo===Things to add(possible ideas for future)== | |ToDo===Things to add(possible ideas for future)== | ||
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==Things to 'not' add== | ==Things to 'not' add== | ||
*A derivation of the exact value of the golden ratio. The derivation is redundant with the information in the golden ratio page. | *A derivation of the exact value of the golden ratio. The derivation is redundant with the information in the golden ratio page. | ||
| - | |InProgress=Yes | + | |InProgress=No |
| + | } | ||
| + | |AuthorName=Unknown | ||
| + | |SiteURL=http://luis-tejeiro.blogspot.com/2009_03_01_archive.html | ||
| + | |Field=Number Theory | ||
| + | |Pre-K=No | ||
| + | |Elementary=No | ||
| + | |MiddleSchool=No | ||
| + | |HighSchool=Yes | ||
| + | |InProgress=No | ||
| + | } | ||
| + | |Field=Algebra | ||
| + | |InProgress=No | ||
| + | } | ||
| + | |Field=Algebra | ||
| + | |InProgress=No | ||
}} | }} | ||
Current revision
| Fibonacci numbers in a sea shell |
|---|
Fibonacci numbers in a sea shell
- The spiral curve of the Nautilus sea shell follows the pattern of a spiral drawn in a Fibonacci rectangle, a collection of squares with sides that have the length of Fibonacci numbers
.
Contents
|
Basic Description
The Fibonacci sequence is the sequence where the first two numbers are 1s and every later number is the sum of the two previous numbers. So, given two
's as the first two terms, the next terms of the sequence follows as :
The Fibonacci numbers can be discovered in nature, such as the spiral of the Nautilus sea shell, the petals of the flowers, the seed head of a sunflower, and many other parts. The seeds at the head of the sunflower, for instance, are arranged so that one can find a collection of spirals in both clockwise and counterclockwise ways. Different patterns of spirals are formed depending on whether one is looking at a clockwise or counterclockwise way; thus, the number of spirals also differ depending on the counting direction, as shown by Image 1. The two numbers of spirals are always consecutive numbers in the Fibonacci sequence.
Nature prefers this way of arranging seeds because it seems to allow the seeds to be uniformly distributed. For more information about Fibonacci patterns in nature, see Fibonacci Numbers in Nature
Origin
The Fibonacci sequence was studied by Leonardo of Pisa, or Fibonacci (1770-1240). In his work Liber Abacci, he introduced a problem involving the growth of the rabbit population. The assumptions were
- there is one pair of baby rabbits placed in an enclosed place on the first day of January
- this pair will grow for one month before reproducing and produce a new pair of baby rabbits on the first day of March
- each new pair will mature for one month and produce a new pair of rabbits on the first day of their third month
- the rabbits never die, so after they mature, the rabbits produce a new pair of baby rabbits every month.
The problem was to find out how many pairs of rabbits there will be after one year.
On January 1st, there is only 1 pair. On February 1st, this baby rabbits matured to be grown up rabbits, but they have not reproduced, so there will only be the original pair present.
Now look at any later month. June is a good example. As you can see in Image 2, all 5 pairs of rabbits that were alive in May continue to be alive in June. Furthermore, there are 3 new pairs of rabbits born in June, one for each pair that was alive in April (and are therefore old enough to reproduce in June).
This means that on June 1st, there are 5 + 3 = 8 pairs of rabbits. This same reasoning can be applied to any month, March or later, so the number of rabbits pairs in any month is the same as the sum of the number of rabbit pairs in the two previous months.
This is exactly the rule that defines the Fibonacci sequence. As you can see in the image, the population by month begins: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, ..., which is the same as the beginning of the Fibonacci sequence. The population continues to match the Fibonacci sequence no matter how many months out you go.
An interesting fact is that this problem of rabbit population was not intended to explain the Fibonacci numbers. This problem was originally intended to introduce the Hindu-Arabic numerals to Western Europe, where people were still using Roman numerals, and to help people practice addition. It was coincidence that the number of rabbits followed a certain pattern which people later named as the Fibonacci sequence.
Fibonacci Numbers in Nature
A More Mathematical Explanation
Symbolic Definition of Fibonacci Sequence
The Fibonacci sequence is the sequence UNIQ5b39218245 [...]Symbolic Definition of Fibonacci Sequence
The Fibonacci sequence is the sequence
where
,
and
.
The Fibonacci sequence is recursively defined because each term is defined in terms of its two immediately preceding terms.
Identities and Properties
Golden Ratio
Binet's Formula for Fibonacci Numbers
Fibonacci Numbers and Fractals
Teaching Materials
- There are currently no teaching materials for this page. Add teaching materials.
References
Maurer, Stephen B & Ralston, Anthony. (2004) Discrete Algorithmic Mathematics. Massachusetts : A K Peters.
Posamentier, Alfred S & Lehmann Ingmar. (2007) The Fabulous Fibonacci Numbers. New York : Prometheus Books.
Vorb'ev, N. N. (1961) Fibonacci Numbers. New York : Blaisdell Publishing Company.
Hoggatt, Verner E., Jr. (1969) Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers. Boston : Houghton Mifflin Company.
Knott, Ron. (n.d.). The Fibonacci Numbers and Golden Section in Nature. Retrieved from http://www.maths.surrey.ac.uk/hosted-sites/R.Knott/Fibonacci/fibnat.html
Wikipedia (Golden Ratio). (n.d.). Golden Ratio. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_ratio.
Fibonacci Numbers in Nature & the Golden Ratio. (n.d.). In World-Mysteries.com. Retrieved from http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_17.htm
http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_17.htm
Wikipedia (Mandelbrot Set). (n.d.). Mandelbrot Set. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbrot_set.
Devaney, Robert L. (2006) Unveiling the Mandelbrot Set. Retrieved from http://plus.maths.org/issue40/features/devaney/.
Weisstein, Eric W. (n.d.). Mandelbrot Set. In MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. Retrieved from http://mathworld.wolfram.com/MandelbrotSet.html.
Future Directions for this Page
Things to add(possible ideas for future)
- Fibonacci numbers and Pascal's triangle
- A helper page for recursively defined sequence
- A section describing the Fibonacci numbers with negative subscripts. this appears in Finite Difference of Fibonacci Numbers section
Things to 'not' add
- A derivation of the exact value of the golden ratio. The derivation is redundant with the information in the golden ratio page.
Leave a message on the discussion page by clicking the 'discussion' tab at the top of this image page.




is recursively defined.
Fibonacci numbers, the sum of Fibonacci numbers with odd indices and sum of Fibonacci number with even indices. Note that all the identities and properties in this section can be proven in a more rigorous way through
Fibonacci number:
Fibonacci numbers is :
is one unit less than the length of
.


and
, all terms on the right side of the equation is canceled out by another term that has the opposite sign and the same magnitude. Because
, we get :
Fibonacci number:
Fibonacci numbers with odd indices is:
, all the terms on the right side of the equation disappear because each term is canceled out by another term that has the opposite sign and the same magnitude.
Fibonacci number:

Fibonacci numbe [...]
Fibonacci numbers, we get the identity of the sum of Fibonacci numbers with even indices.
. Thus,
and the
Fibonacci numbers.
through
, with the value of
.
.
.
.
. Since
Fibonacci number and
Fibonacci number, let
.
,
.
.
.
.
are consecutive Fibonacci numbers, this property says that
.
and
have some integer k as their common divisor. Then, [...]
as their common divisor. Then, both
,
must also be a multiple of
must also be a multiple of
must also be a multiple of
, and the only common divisor between two consecutive Fibonacci numbers is 1. Thus, two consecutive Fibonacci numbers are relatively prime.

.
.
.
, and the exact value is
=1
=2
=1.5
=1.66667
=1.6
=1.625
=1.61538
=1.61904
=1.61765
=1.61818
denote the ratio of two consecutive Fibonacci numbers, that is,
.
.
are related by :
.
be that limit:
.
.
we get :
.
, which produces the solutions for equations of form
.

,
are the two roots of
.

or
, depending on situation.
.
.
, as desired.
.
for which the sequence
.
is included in the Mandelbrot set because
for any
is included in the Mandelbrot set.
,

